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Hunters Threat Hunting Raises $15 Million in Series A Funding

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Hunters, an Israeli company that specializes in autonomous threat hunting, has added $15 million in a Series A funding round.. The Series A funding brings Hunters' total financing to date to $20.4 million.

The Series A funding supports the expansion of Hunters' North American operations, the company said. It also will help Hunters boost the development of its Extended Detection & Response (XDR) technology.

We're checking to see if or how Hunters plans to launch a partner program that specifically engages MSPs and MSSPs (managed security services providers).

Early Hunters.AI platform adopters include Snowflake Computing, a fast-growing cloud data warehouse company that's gearing up for a potential Initial Public Offering (IPO).

What is XDR?

XDR allows organizations to use their existing security solutions and data sources to detect more cyber threats, faster than ever before, Hunters indicated. To do so, XDR picks up weak threat signals and connects them across sparse and siloed data sources.

In addition, XDR connects raw data and integrated telemetry across an organization's IT stack, Hunters noted. This allows Hunters to apply intelligence based on cyber threat tactics, techniques and procedures (TTP) to identify potential attack signals, map them to the MITRE ATT&CK framework and automatically analyze, enrich and correlate massive volumes of data.

XDR also reduces alert fatigue and false warnings, according to Hunters. In doing so, XDR helps security operations center (SOC) teams expedite incident response.

A Closer Look at Hunters' Threat Hunting Solution

Hunters offers an autonomous threat hunting solution that detects cyberattacks that bypass existing security controls, the company said. This solution extracts threat signals, scores them and correlates them across an organization's attack surface.

Furthermore, Hunters' threat hunting solution uses attack intelligence and TTP-based matrices to identify threats across IT environments, the company pointed out. It also can be connected to an organization's IT environment via restful APIs, security information and event management (SIEM) solutions and other technologies.

Dan Kobialka

Dan Kobialka is senior contributing editor, MSSP Alert and ChannelE2E. He covers IT security, IT service provider business strategies and partner programs. Dan holds a M.A. in Print and Multimedia Journalism from Emerson College and a B.A. in English from Bridgewater State University. In his free time, Dan enjoys jogging, traveling, playing sports, touring breweries and watching football.