Wiz, Inc.


Wiz, Inc. is an Israeli-American cloud security company,
headquartered in New York City. The company was founded in January 2020 by Assaf Rappaport, Yinon Costica, Roy Reznik, and Ami Luttwak, all of whom previously founded Adallom. The company's platform analyzes computing infrastructure hosted in Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, and Kubernetes for combinations of risk factors that could allow malicious actors to gain control of cloud resources and/or exfiltrate valuable data.
, Wiz employed about 1,995 people, with most sales and marketing personnel scattered across North America and Europe while most engineering personnel are based in Tel Aviv, Israel. In August 2022, Wiz claimed to be the fastest startup ever to scale from $1 million to $100 million in annual recurring revenue, from February 2021 to approximately July 2022. In February 2024, the company claimed to have reached $350M in ARR, with a 45% market share of Fortune 100 companies.
In March 2025, it was announced that Alphabet Inc. would acquire Wiz in a $32 billion deal.

History

Wiz was founded in January 2020 by Assaf Rappaport, Yinon Costica, Roy Reznik, and Ami Luttwak, all of whom previously founded Adallom. Rappaport is CEO, Costica is VP of Product, Reznik is VP of Engineering, and Luttwak is CTO.
Wiz agreed to acquire Tel Aviv-based Raftt, a cloud-based developer collaboration platform, for $50 million in December 2023. In April 2024, the company acquired cloud detection and response startup, Gem Security, for around $350 million. Also that month, reports indicated that Wiz intended to purchase Lacework, but in May the deal fell through during the due diligence process. In November 2024, the company acquired security remediation and risk management startup Dazz for a cash-and-share deal valued at $450 million.

Acquisition by Alphabet Inc.

In March 2024, Google and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai reached out to Rappaport via email to express interest in a potential bid to acquire the company. Rappaport initially missed the email until May, when he met with Pichai and Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian at the Googleplex in Mountain View, California. Less than a month later, Google made an offer to acquire the company at a valuation of $23 billion. Initially, Wiz turned down the offer in favor of going public. However, the deal was revived due to weakness in the IPO market and a more mergers and acquisitions–friendly Trump administration, and on March 18, 2025, Google announced an all-cash acquisition of Wiz for $32 billion. Once closed, Wiz will join Google Cloud. The deal "represent the largest cybersecurity acquisition of all time the most expensive acquisition Google has ever made in any sector".

Funding

Wiz has raised a total of $1.9 billion from a combination of venture capital funds and private investors:

Research

Wiz researchers have discovered and publicly disclosed numerous cloud vulnerabilities that garnered significant media coverage:
  • ChaosDB – A series of flaws in Microsoft Azure's Cosmos DB that made it possible to download, delete, or manipulate databases belonging to thousands of Azure customers.
  • OMIGOD – Bugs in Open Management Infrastructure, a ubiquitous but poorly documented agent embedded in many popular Azure services, that allowed for unauthenticated remote code execution and privilege escalation.
  • NotLegit – Insecure default behavior in the Azure App Service that exposed the source code of some customer applications.
  • ExtraReplica – A chain of critical vulnerabilities found in the Azure Database for PostgreSQL Flexible Server that could let malicious users escalate privileges and gain access to other customers' databases after bypassing authentication.
  • AttachMe – A cloud isolation vulnerability that, before it was patched by Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, could have allowed attackers to access and modify other users' OCI storage volumes without authorization.
  • Hell's Keychain – A first-of-its-kind cloud service provider supply-chain vulnerability in IBM Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL that, before it was patched, could have allowed malicious actors to remotely execute code in victims' environments.
  • BingBang – A misconfiguration in Azure Active Directory that allowed Wiz researchers to modify Bing.com search results in a way that malicious actors could use to steal Office 365 credentials granting access to countless users' private emails and documents.
  • DeepSeek – Wiz said it had found a trove of sensitive information in a key database from the artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek which was inadvertently exposed to the open internet.