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Israeli AI security startup Reclaim raises $20 million in Series A Funding

Cybersecurity teams today face a strange paradox: they have more security tools than ever, yet deciding what to fix first has never been harder.

Israeli cybersecurity startup Reclaim Security believes the problem isn’t detection — it’s prioritization and action.

The company has raised $20 million in a Series A funding round led by Acrew Capital, with participation from Ibex Investors and QP Ventures. With this round, Reclaim’s total funding now stands at $26 million.

The new capital will help the company expand its AI-powered cybersecurity platform designed to help organizations move beyond simply identifying vulnerabilities — and actually fix them faster.

The Cybersecurity Problem Most Companies Don’t Talk About

Modern enterprises deploy dozens of security systems: vulnerability scanners, cloud security tools, endpoint protection platforms, and threat intelligence feeds.

Each tool generates alerts.
Each tool suggests fixes.
But none agree on priority.

The result? Security teams often struggle to determine which vulnerabilities actually matter most.

Barak Klinghofer, founder and CEO of Reclaim Security, says this confusion is exactly what the company is trying to solve.

“Organizations receive recommendations from many different systems. It becomes difficult to decide what to fix first and understand the consequences of each action,” Klinghofer said.

Reclaim’s platform analyzes vulnerabilities across the organization, studies how the company operates, and delivers clear remediation guidance — including automated ways to fix the issues.

In short, it aims to turn fragmented security alerts into actionable decisions.

AI Is Changing the Cybersecurity Arms Race

The cybersecurity landscape is evolving rapidly, largely due to advances in artificial intelligence.

Klinghofer pointed to the emergence of powerful AI tools such as Claude Code, which can analyze software and identify hundreds of vulnerabilities in seconds.

While this dramatically improves detection, it also raises a new concern.

“Tools like these can identify hundreds of vulnerabilities instantly, but they also give attackers a fast, autonomous engine to exploit them,” Klinghofer said.

If organizations still rely on manual processes to evaluate and fix each vulnerability, defenders risk falling behind attackers who can now automate exploitation.

This is where Reclaim’s automation-focused approach becomes critical.

How Reclaim’s AI Platform Works

Founded in 2024 by Barak Klinghofer, Roy Peretz, Yaniv Waksman, and Or Virnik, Reclaim has built a platform that combines AI-driven automation with attack-path simulations.

Instead of simply listing vulnerabilities, the system analyzes how a real-world attack might unfold inside a company’s environment.

The platform:

  • Simulates potential attack paths within a company’s infrastructure

  • Evaluates how existing defenses would respond

  • Predicts the impact of potential fixes before they are implemented

By connecting attack-path analysis with business-focused remediation strategies, the platform helps organizations close security gaps without disrupting critical operations.

The goal is to shift cybersecurity teams away from reactive “assume breach” strategies toward proactive risk reduction.

Building a Cybersecurity Company During Conflict

Like many Israeli startups, Reclaim is operating amid ongoing regional tensions.

The company’s offices are located in Tel Aviv’s Sarona district, but the team has transitioned to fully remote work as the conflict with Iran escalates.

Klinghofer recalled recently having to end a client call early after an air-raid siren sounded — something clients understood.

Many employees have temporarily relocated to quieter areas, but the company continues to operate normally.

“We’ve learned from past conflicts,” Klinghofer said. “Keeping daily communication is key, and we’re focused on maintaining smooth operations.”

The Editorial View: Cybersecurity Needs Fewer Alerts, More Decisions

The cybersecurity industry has spent years building tools that detect problems. But detection alone doesn’t secure an organization.

What companies really need is decision intelligence — systems that explain risk, prioritize action, and automate remediation.

Reclaim Security is betting that this is the next evolution of cybersecurity platforms.

If AI is accelerating both attacks and defenses, the companies that win won’t just be the ones that detect threats fastest.

They’ll be the ones that fix them fastest.

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