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trendPublished May 11, 2026· Updated May 17, 2026· 1 source

Frame Security Exits Stealth With $50M to Tackle Human Risk via AI Simulations

Frame Security has emerged from stealth with $50 million in funding to deploy an AI-powered human risk management platform that uses deepfake simulations and real-time behavioral analysis to train employees.

Frame Security has officially exited stealth mode, announcing $50 million in funding to scale its AI-driven human risk management platform. The company, which maintains operations in both the United States and Israel, aims to modernize cybersecurity awareness and training by moving beyond traditional, static compliance modules toward a dynamic, behavior-based approach SecurityWeek.

The platform is designed to manage the entire security awareness lifecycle, integrating simulated attacks, personalized training, and automated threat triage. A core component of the system is its simulation engine, which leverages AI to generate highly tailored phishing, voice, and video deepfake scenarios. These simulations are customized based on an employee’s specific role and their unique communication patterns, forcing staff to contend with realistic, modern threats rather than generic templates SecurityWeek.

Beyond simulations, Frame Security provides a continuous risk-scoring engine. This system aggregates data from both simulation performance and daily employee behavior to offer security teams real-time visibility into risk levels at the individual, team, and organizational tiers. This data-driven approach is intended to help organizations move away from "one-size-fits-all" training, allowing security teams to rapidly deploy individualized programs that address specific, emerging attack techniques as they appear in the wild SecurityWeek.

The platform also includes a dedicated phishing and threat-triage module. When employees encounter and report suspicious messages across various communication channels, the platform’s AI automatically analyzes and scores the threat in real time. This functionality is designed to reduce the burden on security operations centers by automating the initial assessment of reported incidents SecurityWeek.

Founded by CEO Tal Shlomo—a former early employee at cloud security firm Wiz—and CTO Sharon Shmueli, formerly the CTO of the venture group Team8, the company has already secured a customer base ranging from startups to Fortune 500 enterprises. The $50 million investment round was led by Team8, Index Ventures, and Picture Capital, with participation from Elad Gil, Cerca Partners, and Tesonet SecurityWeek.

The emergence of Frame Security highlights a broader industry trend of startups focusing on the "human element" of cybersecurity through AI-powered automation. As deepfake technology and sophisticated social engineering continue to challenge traditional security awareness training, investors are increasingly backing platforms that promise to quantify and mitigate human risk with the same level of technical rigor applied to software and infrastructure security SecurityWeek.

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