
Repello AI Raises USD 1.2 Million Seed Round, Launches GenAI Security Platforms
"We're at an inflection point where AI adoption is accelerating faster than security solutions can keep pace," says Aryaman Behera, Co-founder and CEO of Repello AI
You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.
Repello AI, a San Francisco and Bengaluru-based startup focused on AI security, has raised USD 1.2 million in seed funding to advance its mission of safeguarding generative AI (GenAI) systems.
Founded in 2024 by IIT Roorkee alumni Aryaman Behera and Naman Mishra, the company is addressing a rising concern among enterprises: the growing vulnerability of GenAI applications to complex and evolving cyber threats. The seed round saw participation from Venture Highway (acquired by General Catalyst), pi Ventures, Entrepreneur First, and angel investors including Charles Songhurst (Board Member, Meta), Vivek Raghavan (CEO, Sarvam.ai), and Satya Vyas (CEO, Project Hero).
With the fresh capital, Repello AI plans to accelerate product development, expand its red teaming and threat intelligence capabilities, and scale go-to-market operations.
As part of its launch, Repello AI introduced two security platforms—ARTEMIS and Repello Guard—designed to help enterprises continuously identify and mitigate AI-specific risks.
ARTEMIS (Automated Red Teaming Engine for Mapping, Identification and Scanning) performs millions of adversarial tests across modalities like text, image, and audio to proactively uncover vulnerabilities in GenAI systems and provide actionable fixes.
Repello Guard complements this by offering runtime protection through threat monitoring and guardrails, detecting unsafe outputs, system prompt leaks, and brand-damaging content in real time. "We're at an inflection point where AI adoption is accelerating faster than security solutions can keep pace," said Aryaman Behera, Co-founder and CEO of Repello AI.
"Enterprises are deploying generative AI across every function, but they're doing it with yesterday's security playbook. The best defense is a strong offense, and we're ensuring our customers can proactively identify and neutralise emerging AI security threats before they become enterprise risks. The market needs a new approach—one that's as sophisticated and scalable as the AI systems it's protecting. That's exactly what we're building."
The company's approach combines offensive security methods with automation to address risks like prompt injection attacks, compliance failures, and unsafe AI behaviors—challenges that traditional cybersecurity tools often miss.
Co-founder and CTO Naman Mishra added, "As GenAI transforms industries, its security architecture cannot be an afterthought. From day one, our goal has been to stay ahead of emerging threats. With our products, we're reimagining AI security from the ground up, merging proactive adversarial testing with automated scale to preempt threats before they are exploited."
Supporting this view, Roopan Aulakh, Managing Director at pi Ventures, said, "Generative AI introduces a fundamentally new threat landscape. One that traditional cybersecurity solutions weren't built for. Accurately detecting and mitigating threats in the dynamic GenAI attack surface is a complex challenge. Having built in security and AI since their college days, Aryaman and Naman have built a GenAI-native security solution to go beyond perimeter defense, identify unknown threats and optimise for high precision and recall."
Currently used by companies like Groww and PhysicsWallah.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


WIRED
an hour ago
- WIRED
Ahead of Protests, Waymo Scales Back Robotaxi Service Nationwide
A week after five robot cars were burned in Los Angeles, the Google sister company isn't taking risks. Passengers ride in an electric Jaguar I-Pace car outfitted with Waymo full self-driving technology in Santa Monica, CA. Photograph: Allen J. Schaben/Getty Images Waymo will temporarily limit robotaxi service in all of its nationwide markets, the company said Friday, as US cities prepare for a wave of protests of federal immigration policies and law enforcement and military crackdowns on demonstrators. The Alphabet subsidiary will stop service in Los Angeles altogether. Waymo spokesperson Sandy Karp confirmed the service pause and adjustments but declined to comment further. There is no indication how long the service changes will last. The adjustments will affect service in San Francisco, Austin, Texas, and Atlanta, Georgia. On Friday afternoon, some San Francisco riders saw in-app messages showing that all of the company's robotaxis were busy, and so unable to pick up rides. The move comes a week after protesters set fire to five autonomous taxis operated by the company in downtown Los Angeles. Images of the fires went viral on social media, and became a flashpoint in discussions about protester violence and the role tech plays in citizen surveillance. The incident raised questions about the camera and sensor data collected by Waymo on public roads, and how or if it's shared with law enforcement. Earlier this week, Karp told WIRED that the company generally challenges data requests that are overly broad or don't have a sound legal basis. She declined to comment on specific cases. Waymo sometimes adjusts service areas ahead of major events marked by large crowds and traffic, including sports matches and concerts, and in response to incidents like fires or floods where road safety is a concern.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Synthetic Identity Document Fraud Surges 300% in the U.S. - Sumsub Warns E-Commerce, Healthtech and Fintech at Risk
North America sees major spike in synthetic document fraud and deepfake-related attacks, particularly across e-commerce, edtech, and healthtech sectors NEW YORK, June 12, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Sumsub, a global leader in verification, today released Q1 2025 identity fraud trends based on internal data, revealing a dramatic rise in AI-enabled fraud across the United States. According to platform data, deepfake fraud has surged by 1100%, while synthetic identity document fraud rose by over 300% with attackers exploiting generative AI to create fake passports, IDs, and biometric data. Sumsub analyzed millions of verification checks conducted on its platform between January and March 2025 across industries such as fintech, e-commerce, healthtech, and edtech to uncover emerging fraud trends. One of the most pressing concerns is the rise of synthetic identity document fraud, where criminals use AI tools to generate fake identity documents such as driver's licenses or passports. These synthetic identity documents are often realistic enough to bypass basic KYC checks, posing a significant challenge for businesses. Unlike synthetic identity documents, which involve the creation of entirely fake personas using a mix of real and fabricated data, synthetic identity documents refer specifically to falsified documents or images generated by AI. Fraudsters then use these AI-generated visuals to open accounts, conduct illicit transactions, or bypass compliance processes, making detection increasingly difficult without advanced verification tools North America-Specific Insights (Q1 2025): Synthetic identity document fraud spiked by 311% in North America compared to Q1 2024, making it the region's most alarming growth vector. Deepfake fraud jumped by 1100%, marking a clear signal that generative AI is being used to bypass facial recognition and biometric checks. High fraud activity was recorded in e-commerce, healthtech and edtech––industries have seen accelerated digitization post-pandemic. The U.S. in particular saw a sharp increase in fintech fraud attempts, underscoring the need for real-time, multi-layered fraud prevention solutions. Key Global Findings (Q1 2025): Synthetic identity document fraud is rising across all regions, fueled by widespread access to GenAI tools that can generate highly realistic fake IDs. Top markets for synthetic identity document fraud include: Ethiopia (2.17%) Pakistan (2.08%) Nigeria (1.52%) Other notable markets: Hong Kong (0.99%), Indonesia (0.84%), Turkey (0.80%)Deepfake-related attacks are growing globally, particularly to bypass biometric systems—now one of the fastest-evolving fraud vectors. Healthtech fraud attempts rose by 384%, signaling its emergence as a high-value target alongside fintech and e-commerce. Regional deepfakefraud surges: Canada: 3,400% Hong Kong: 1,900% Singapore: 1,500% Mainland China: 1,183% Germany: 1,100% United Kingdom: 900% United States: 700% "The pace at which fraud tactics are evolving is staggering," said Andrew Sever, CEO of Sumsub. "As generative AI becomes more accessible, so does the ability to generate synthetic identity documents and deepfakes at scale. What we're seeing is a broader trend, in which Fraud-as-a-Service is becoming a reality, where malicious actors can easily access sophisticated tools to carry out attacks. Businesses can no longer rely on outdated verification tools. It's imperative they adopt an intelligent, adaptive approach to stay ahead." To combat this new wave of fraud, Sumsub continues to invest in advanced AI-powered fraud detection, document authenticity analysis, and biometric defense tools to protect businesses and users worldwide. The company urges organizations to stay proactive by integrating multi-layered verification and continuous monitoring into their onboarding and transaction workflows. About Sumsub: Sumsub is a full-cycle verification and ongoing monitoring platform that secures the whole user journey. With Sumsub's customizable KYC, KYB, Transaction Monitoring, Fraud Prevention and Travel Rule solutions, you can orchestrate your verification process, welcome more customers worldwide, meet compliance requirements, reduce costs, and protect your business. Sumsub has over 4,000 clients across the fintech, crypto, transportation, trading, edtech, e-commerce and gaming industries including Duolingo, Bitpanda, Wirex, Avis, Bybit, Vodafone, Kaizen Gaming, and TransferGo. Methodology Note: Unless otherwise specified, all figures referenced are based on Sumsub's internal statistics, drawn from millions of identity verification checks conducted globally between Q1 2024 and Q1 2025. These insights reflect real-world patterns across multiple industries and geographies, offering a representative snapshot of digital verification trends during this period. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Sumsub Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Washington Post
3 hours ago
- Washington Post
Judge halts Rubio's plan to lay off almost 2,000 State Dept. employees
A federal judge in California has halted a State Department plan to lay off almost 2,000 employees, marking a setback to Secretary of State Marco Rubio's push to rapidly downsize the agency. Speaking in court on Friday, U.S. District Judge Susan Illston in San Francisco said an earlier ruling that prohibited federal agencies from laying off people also applied to the State Department's downsizing efforts, despite arguments by government lawyers.