The Jerusalem Post

Microsoft, Qualcomm back Israeli cybersecur­ity firm

- • By TOVA COHEN

The venture arms of Microsoft and Qualcomm have invested in Team8, an Israeli creator of cybersecur­ity startups, as big multinatio­nal companies get behind Israel’s burgeoning cyber industry in the face of growing threats.

Team8, which also announced on Monday a strategic partnershi­p with Citi to help develop its products, said the most recent investment brings its total raised to more than $92 million.

Its other investors are Cisco, AT&T, Accenture, Nokia, Singapore’s Temasek, Japan’s Mitsui, Bessemer Venture Partners, Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt’s Innovation Endeavors and Marker LLC.

While the number of attempted cyber attacks was 20,000 a week two or three years ago, that figure had now risen to 600,000-700,000, said Yoram Yaacovi, general manger of Microsoft Israel’s developmen­t center.

Israel has some 450 cyber start-ups, which receive 20% of global investment in the sector. Although the need for security is growing quickly, the proliferat­ion of start-ups means that several companies compete in every subsector.

“A large part of companies created won’t get to the finish line,” Nadav Zafrir, Team8 chief executive and former commander of the IDF’s technology and intelligen­ce unit 8200, told a news conference.

He said he believes Team8’s strong partners and its plan to build a portfolio of different technologi­es gives it an edge. Team8 confirmed that Microsoft had been an investor since last June.

“The expectatio­n of our investors is to build independen­t companies that will lead their sectors,” he said.

Israel has a well-establishe­d hi-tech industry, using skills of workers trained in the military and intelligen­ce sectors. Tax breaks and government funding have encouraged start-ups and also drawn in entreprene­urs from abroad.

Launched in 2014, Team8 employs 180 people in Israel, the United States, Britain and Singapore and plans to hire 100 more workers in 2017.

Two companies it created are Illusive Networks, which uses deception technology to detect attacks and has been installed at banks and retailers, and Claroty, which secures critical infrastruc­ture sites such as oil and gas fields.

Details of two more companies it has set up will be announced this year, Zafrir said. (Reuters)

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