OX Security Locks in $60M to Tackle the Hidden Risks of AI-Generated Code

OX Security just closed a $60 million Series B round, aiming to solve one of the thorniest problems in modern software development: figuring out which security flaws actually matter.

OX Security Locks in $60M to Tackle the Hidden Risks of AI-Generated Code

The raise was led by DTCP, with backing from tech giants like IBM Ventures, Microsoft, Swisscom Ventures, Evolution Equity Partners, and Team8.

With AI now pumping out code at breakneck speed, traditional security tools are struggling to keep up.

They catch a flood of potential issues but leave developers buried in alerts, unable to tell what's a real threat and what's just noise. That’s where OX steps in.

"As AI-generated code becomes the new normal, the risks it introduces are often hidden beneath seemingly innocuous code, flaws that traditional security tools are not built to detect," said Neatsun Ziv, CEO and Co-Founder of OX Security, highlighting the significance of the announcement.

OX claims its platform uses AI with “critical thinking” modules that work like the best security engineers—helping developers cut through the clutter and focus on the top 5% of vulnerabilities that pose real risk. That promise has translated into results: the company hit $10 million in sales and more than tripled its customer base in the past year.

Currently used by over 200 organizations, including Microsoft, IBM, eToro, and SoFi, OX’s platform is gaining traction with enterprises that need to tighten their security without slowing down software releases.

The company says its method of modeling risk across both AI and human-generated code makes it easier to prioritize the flaws most likely to lead to breaches.

This funding brings OX’s total raised to $94 million. The company plans to use the fresh capital to expand globally and continue improving its platform, especially as AI pushes the pace of code development even further.

Meanwhile, DTCP’s Dean Shahar is calling it a “paradigm shift,” and in an industry that’s tired of endless alerts and false alarms, that kind of clarity is hard to ignore.