• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Technologies.org

Technology Trends: Follow the Money

  • Technology Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Technology Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

Venafi Secures $100M Financing Round Led by TCV

November 29, 2018 By admin Leave a Comment

Venafi®, the leading provider of machine identity protection, today announced the closing of a $100 million round of financing, led by TCV with additional participation from existing investors, QuestMark Partners and NextEquity Partners. TCV is one of the largest and most respected providers of capital to growth-stage private and public companies in the technology industry and has backed industry-leading companies, including Airbnb, Alarm.com, Cradlepoint, Genesys, Netflix, Rapid7, Silver Peak, Splunk, Spotify and Zillow. As part of the transaction, TCV general partner, Jake Reynolds, joins Venafi’s board of directors.

The funding will be used to accelerate Venafi’s growth and to cement the firm’s growing market leadership. In addition to fueling growth, $12.5 million of the investment will be made available to third-party developers in the first tranche of the new Machine Identity Protection Development Fund. Venafi created the fund to accelerate the integration of machine identity intelligence into a wide range of machines in the enterprise and further enhance and expand the machine identity ecosystem. The fund will allow developers, including consultancies, systems integrators, fast-moving startups, open source developers and cybersecurity vendors to apply for sponsorship. This sponsorship will allow recipients to build integrations that deliver greater visibility, intelligence and automation for Venafi customers across any technology that creates or consumes machine identities.

“Identity is the foundation of security,” said Jeff Hudson, CEO of Venafi. “The cyber world is made up of machines, and all machines require identities for the cyber world to be secure. As a society, we understand the risks associated with human identity theft very well, and we spend over $8 billion per year protecting human identities. However, most organizations don’t yet understand the risks associated with machine identities and, as a result, spend almost nothing to protect them. This leaves our global digital economy at risk. TCV has a long history of partnering with the world’s leading technology firms, so we’re very excited about the opportunity to work with them. Their investment and expertise will help us ensure that the world’s machines, including hardware and software from smart machines, virtual servers, applications, containers, and more, are connected, safe and secure.”

Just as usernames and passwords are used to identify and authenticate humans, machine identities enable the trusted relationships between machines that control the flow of sensitive data. Because machine identities are poorly understood and often unprotected, they are subject to being exploited by cybercriminals. The Venafi platform protects the machine identities whose underlying technology is cryptographic keys and digital certificates by providing unparalleled visibility, intelligence and automation.

“The team at TCV is excited about our partnership with Venafi,” said Jake Reynolds, general partner at TCV. “DevOps and IoT are driving growth in the number of machines thanks to cloud computing, virtualization, and the proliferation of connected devices. Venafi is well-positioned to provide the machine identity protection for enterprise machines, and we look forward to supporting the Venafi team as they continue to scale in this rapidly expanding market.”

With over 30 patents, Venafi delivers innovative machine identity protection solutions for the world’s most demanding, security-conscious Global 5000 organizations, including the top five U.S. health insurers; the top five U.S. airlines; four of the top five U.S. retailers; and four of the top five banks in each of the following countries: U.S., U.K., Australia and South Africa.

For more information about the fund please visit: https://www.venafi.com/machine-identity-protection-fund

About Venafi
Venafi is the inventor and cybersecurity market leader in machine identity protection, securing connections and communications between machines. Venafi protects machine identity types by orchestrating cryptographic keys and digital certificates for SSL/TLS, IoT, mobile and SSH. Venafi provides global visibility of machine identities and the risks associated with them for the extended enterprise—on premises, mobile, virtual, cloud and IoT—at machine speed and scale. Venafi puts this intelligence into action with automated remediation that reduces the security and availability risks connected with weak or compromised machine identities while safeguarding the flow of information to trusted machines and preventing communication with untrusted machines.
For more information, visit: www.venafi.com.

About TCV
Founded in 1995, TCV provides capital to growth-stage private and public companies in the technology industry. Since inception, TCV has invested over $10 billion in leading technology companies and has helped guide CEOs through more than 115 IPOs and strategic acquisitions. TCV’s investments include Airbnb, Altiris, AxiomSL, Dollar Shave Club, EmbanetCompass, EtQ, ExactTarget, Expedia, Facebook, Fandango, GoDaddy, HomeAway, LinkedIn, Netflix, OSIsoft, Rent the Runway, Sitecore, Splunk, Spotify, Varsity Tutors, and Zillow. TCV is headquartered in Menlo Park, California, with offices in New York and London. For more information about TCV, including a complete list of TCV investments, visit https://www.tcv.com/.

Filed Under: Tech

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • The Humanoid Trap: Form Factor as Distraction in Industrial Robotics
  • Hark Raises $700M Series A at $6B: The Vertical Integration Bet on Personal AI
  • Apple Brings Apple Intelligence to Accessibility, Adds Wheelchair Eye Control for Vision Pro
  • RADAR Raises $170M to Bring Real-Time Inventory Intelligence to Physical Retail
  • Anthropic’s Stainless Acquisition Is an Infrastructure Seizure Disguised as a Developer Tools Deal
  • Blackstone and Google Are Building an AI Infrastructure Giant Outside the Traditional Cloud Model
  • Mind Robotics Crosses $1B in Total Funding; Rivian Is the Quiet Disclosure
  • Quantum Motion Raises $160 Million Series C to Scale Silicon-Based Quantum Computing
  • Fazeshift Raises $17 Million Series A to Automate Accounts Receivable With Autonomous AI Agents
  • Instant Power Becomes the Next AI Infrastructure Battleground as Nyobolt Raises $60 Million

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
  • App Coding
Quantum Computing Equities: Market Segment Memo
Quantum Computing Stocks Face Violent Selloff the Moment Markets Reopen Tuesday
The $2.6 Trillion Signal: What Gartner’s AI Spending Forecast Actually Tells You
The Productivity Is Already Here. The Bubble Narrative Is Not.
The Collingridge Dilemma
Why Memory Prices Won’t Come Down
The Bill Comes Due
The Software-Defined Camera Won. The Open OS Did Not.
Cars Are Computers Now, and Most Carmakers Aren’t
Gartner: Global IT Spending to Hit $6.31 Trillion in 2026, Driven by AI Infrastructure
IdentityTheft.org Sells for $30,000 on Sedo
Infosecurity Europe 2026, June 2–4, London
Ocean Launches From Stealth With $28 Million to Reinvent Email Security Using AI Agents
Salt Typhoon, Volt Typhoon, Flax Typhoon: China’s 2024 Campaign Against U.S. Infrastructure
Foreign Criminal Cyberattacks Against the United States: Ransomware, Botnets, and Financial Fraud
Iran’s Cyber Operations: Infrastructure Attacks, Election Interference, and IRGC Proxies
North Korea’s Cyber Program: From Sony to Blockchain Theft
Russia’s State Cyber Operations: From SolarWinds to Logistics Warfare
China’s Cyber Campaigns Against the United States: Two Decades of Documented Operations
How the U.S. Government Attributes Cyberattacks — and Why It Is Harder Than It Looks
DigitalOcean Launches AI-Native Cloud at Deploy 2026
Verdent Updates AI Platform to Function as a Full Engineering Team for Solo Builders
The Side Project App Is Not Dead. The Side Project App Business Is.
The App Monetization Landscape Has Changed and Most Teams Have Not Caught Up
Building Offline-First Mobile Apps Is Harder Than It Looks and Worth It
State Management in React Native Has Too Many Options and One Right Answer
Mobile Accessibility Is the Case Developers Keep Ignoring
Testing Mobile Apps at Scale Without Losing Your Mind
App Store Optimization in 2026 Is a Different Game Than It Was
Cross-Platform vs Native: The Honest Assessment Nobody Gives You

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
  • API Coding
Tuesday Open: AI Earnings Engine Holds the Line as Iran Overhang Fades to Noise
China’s U.S. Treasury Holdings: The Great Repositioning (2021–2025)
Infographic: Why the 2025 CIPA Data Proves the APS-C Renaissance is Real
How WiFi Changed Media
Canva Acquires Simtheory and Ortto to Build End-to-End Work Platform
Netflix Price Hikes, The Economics of Dominance in a Saturated Streaming Market
America’s Brands Keep Winning Even as America Itself Slips
Kioxia’s Storage Gambit: Flash Steps Into the AI Memory Hierarchy
Mamdani Strangling New York
The Rise of Faceless Creators: Picsart Launches Persona and Storyline for AI Character-Driven Content
Baird 2026 Global Consumer, Technology & Services Conference, June 2–4, New York
D.A. Davidson Technology Conference, June 11, 2026, Nashville
Bank of America Global Technology Conference, June 4, 2026, San Francisco
William Blair Growth Stock Conference, June 3, 2026, Chicago
TD Cowen Technology, Media & Telecom Conference, May 27, 2026, New York
J.P. Morgan Global Technology, Media and Communications Conference, May 18–20, 2026, Boston
Technology Investor Conference Circuit, May–June 2026
Automate 2026 Sets Its Agenda Around AI’s Role in Industrial Transformation, June 22–25, 2026, McCormick Place in Chicago
IBM Think 2026, May 5–8, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
AI & Creativity Summit New York 2026, May 14, The Lighthouse Brooklyn
Why Private Domain Data Is the Real Key to AI That Actually Works
Orkes Raises $60M to Bring Production-Grade AI Orchestration to Enterprise Developers
Form.io Launches MCP Server and Agentic Coding Toolset for Governed Enterprise AI Development
Appdome Upgrades MobileBOT Defense With Identity-First Mobile API Protection
Five SDK Generators Compared: Speakeasy, Stainless, Fern, APIMatic, and OpenAPI Generator
API Monetization Models That Work and the Ones That Drive Developers Away
gRPC in Production: What the Documentation Doesn't Tell You
Event-Driven Architecture vs Request-Response: Choosing the Right Communication Pattern
The Business Case for Internal APIs That Most Engineering Leaders Ignore
Breaking Changes: How to Avoid Shipping Them and What to Do When You Must

Copyright © 2026 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis · Market Research · Referently · Photography