Vega Security Takes on Legacy Tech Following $120 Million Raise

cybersecurity Vega

Vega Security raised $120 million in a Series B funding round to expand its cybersecurity solution.

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    The company’s solution aims to disrupt the security information and event management (SIEM) market in which the SIEM model is centralized and all security telemetry is forced into a single system, Vega Security Chief Technology Officer and Co-Founder Eli Rozen said when announcing the round in a Tuesday (Feb. 10) post on LinkedIn.

    “Our federated, distributed architecture runs security analytics as close as possible to where the data is born,” Rozen said in the post. “Telemetry stays within its original cloud and region while still being analyzed in real time, without forced centralization.”

    Vega’s Series B round brought the company’s total funding to $185 million, when added to the $65 million in raised last year in its Series A round, according to a Tuesday press release.

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    Accel announced in a Tuesday post on LinkedIn that it is leading Vega Security’s Series B after leading the company’s Series A in 2025.

    In the time since the Series A, Vega has started working with Fortune 200 companies and global banks, established a commercial base in New York, and grown its leadership team, according to the post.

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    Accel said Vega works with clients in some of the most complex security environments in the world and that some clients use Vega’s solution alongside their existing SIEMS, while others make it their primary security analytics and operations platform.

    “In both applications, clients experience clearer visibility, deeper coverage and faster access to security data, wherever it lives,” Accel said in its post.

    In another recent development in this space, Torq said in January that it raised $140 million in a Series D funding round to accelerate the adoption of its security operations center (SOC) platform for global enterprises and government agencies. The company said its Torq AI SOC Platform uses artificial intelligence agents to manage security tasks.

    In December 2025, ServiceNow said it plans to acquire cyber risk management solution provider Armis for $7.75 billion in cash and create a unified, end-to-end security exposure and operations stack.