Plano Cybersecurity Co. Securonix Acquires Virginia-Based ThreatQuotient

Securonix said the combination will create "a comprehensive, modular, and fully integrated AI-driven platform for threat detection, investigation, and response," leveraging advanced analytics and insights across both internal and external threats.

Plano-based next-gen security analytics and operations management platform Securonix has acquired Virginia-based computer security company ThreatQuotient, snapping up what it called “the most-innovative external threat platform.”

Securonix said the combination will create “a comprehensive, modular, and fully integrated AI-driven platform for threat detection, investigation, and response” (TDIR), leveraging advanced analytics and insights across both internal and external threats.

Terms of the deal were. not disclosed.

“Security teams are drowning in noise and struggling to keep up with evolving threats,” Securonix President and CEO President Kash Shaikh said in a statement. “This acquisition brings together Securonix’s Agentic AI-driven Platform with ThreatQuotient’s deep threat intelligence to deliver clarity, speed, and automated workflows to our customers, reducing false positives by up to 90%. Together, we’re building the modern SOC Platform—proactive, intelligent, and built for what’s next.”

Securonix said the acquisition accelerates the modernization of security operations by uniting internal and external threat intelligence with real-time analytics and agentic AI. It said that unlike external threat intelligence bolt-on solutions with disconnected management interfaces, the integrated platform from Securonix and ThreatQuotient will deliver unified visibility, faster response, and greater operational clarity.

“Bringing threat intelligence management and SIEM together in a unified platform is a game changer. We’ve already seen the value of deeply enriched advanced analytics and detection in our Securonix SIEM environment—but coupling that with integrated threat curation, prioritization, and response should help customers move even faster,” Marcel Jonker, director of Cybersecurity Operations at Cambia Health Systems, said in a statement. “It means fewer swivel-chair investigations, more accurate triage, and greater confidence that security analysts are working with the most relevant threats. This kind of integration has the potential to accelerate the ability to detect, respond, and stay ahead.”

Speeding response and innovation

The integration of Securonix and ThreatQuotient promises to deliver up to a 70% reduction in Mean Time to Respond, enabling security teams to detect, investigate, and remediate threats significantly faster, Securonix said.

By combining curated threat intelligence with AI-driven automation, the solution will deliver exponential improvements in filtering out false positives, enriching alerts with actionable context, and automating historical threat sweeps and incident response, the company added. That reduces alert overload, speeds up root cause analysis, and minimizes manual handoffs—cutting investigation time from hours to minutes and enabling automated containment before threats escalate, Securonix said.

“Securonix and ThreatQuotient bring together complementary strengths—deep innovation across internal and external threat domains, and a shared commitment to innovation and customer service,” Shaikh said. “Both companies serve enterprise and government customers as well as managed security service providers (MSSPs), and we’re excited to welcome the talented ThreatQuotient team and their customers to Securonix.”

ThreatQuotient leadership also expressed an optimistic outlook.

“Enterprises, government institutions and managed security service providers rely on ThreatQuotient to protect their mission critical businesses,” ThreatQuotient CEO John Czupak said in a statement. “Joining Securonix marks a powerful new chapter for ThreatQuotient. By uniting our strengths, we can accelerate innovation, expand our reach, and deliver greater value to our customers. I’m proud of what we’ve built and excited for what’s ahead.”

ThreatQuotient’s Threat Intelligence Platform (TIP) strength lies in delivering curated, contextualized threat intelligence that drives smart, timely decisions, the company said. When combined with Securonix’s EON Agentic AI-based SIEM, SOAR, UEBA and Data Pipeline Manager, customers can accelerate their migration from reactive threat hunting-based defense to proactive, real-time, behavior-driven, open-agentic security operations.

How the deal will help customers and partners

Securonix said that customers and partners will get the following benefits from the deal:

  • Gain clear visibility: Integrate deep enriched real-time analytics from Securonix with curated external intelligence from ThreatQuotient to create a single, high-context stream of alerts. Eliminate blind spots and accelerate threat identification with confidence.
  • Stay ahead of risk: Auto-enrich Indicator of compromise (IoCs) and preemptively respond to repeat attacks, blocking 90 percent before they start.
  • Act smarter: Automate repetitive tasks, reduce false positives, and streamline investigations. Teams can stay focused on high-priority threats and reduce time spent on manual triage.
  • Deploy your way: Continue to use ThreatQ as a standalone threat intelligence platform or as part of the fully integrated Securonix solution. Deploy on-premise or SaaS in a way that fits the current architecture and scales with needs.
  • Accelerated Roadmap: Combined R&D synergies will accelerate upcoming roadmap innovations, including Agentic AI and ThreatQuotient’s innovation priorities.
 

With this acquisition, ThreatQuotient customers and partners will get the following, per Securonix:

  • Increased Scale: ThreatQ customers can take advantage of Securonix’s global R&D scale and GTM reach, including access to Securonix’s Threat Labs.
  • Intelligence.Deeper Integrations: Gain access to an enriched roadmap and integration between Securonix’s best-in-class SIEM, SOAR, and UEBA portfolio and ThreatQ, including extension of Agentic AI advancements.
  • Continued Focus: Zero interruption of their existing service, as ThreatQuotient will continue to operate as a standalone offering, with no disruption to existing roadmap and workflows.
 

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