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Based in Victoria, British Columbia, aDolus Technology provides software supply chain security and intelligence solutions for critical infrastructure, industrial control systems, and IoT devices. The company operates a subscription software model centered on its proprietary FACT platform, which analyzes firmware to generate Software Bill of Materials, identify vulnerabilities, and detect malware. Initially developed with support from the United States Department of Homeland Security, the platform serves device manufacturers, system integrators, and asset owners across the energy, manufacturing, and medical sectors. Operating with fewer than fifty employees, the growing firm raised two and a half million dollars in initial funding from lead investors First In, Energy Innovation Capital, and Wesley Clover. Founded in 2017 by security expert Eric Byres, the company recently expanded its leadership by hiring Kevin Senator as chief executive officer and adding Mark Weatherford to its board.
aDolus Technology Inc. has raised $600K across 1 funding round.
aDolus Technology Inc. has raised $600K in total across 1 funding round.
aDolus Technology Inc. has raised $600K across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $600K Seed in May 2020.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 1, 2020 | $600K Seed | — | Mexican.vc, Reno Seed Fund, RAY Muzyka | Announced |
aDolus Technology Inc. has raised $600K in total across 1 funding round.
aDolus Technology Inc.'s investors include Mexican.vc, Reno Seed Fund, Ray Muzyka.
aDolus Technology Inc. is a Canadian cybersecurity company headquartered in Victoria, British Columbia, specializing in software and firmware intelligence for the OT (Operational Technology), IoT (Internet of Things), and ICS (Industrial Control Systems) supply chains.[1][2][3] Their flagship product, the FACT Platform, provides continuous visibility, software validation scoring, malware detection, and supply chain risk intelligence by correlating data from diverse sources using AI to ensure components are legitimate, tamper-free, and safe.[1][2][3][7] Serving product managers, security teams, engineering managers, procurement, vendors, and asset owners in critical infrastructure, aDolus addresses vulnerability management, compliance, and risk in high-stakes sectors like critical infrastructure, helping prevent supply chain attacks.[1][3]
With under 25 employees and revenue below $5 million, the company demonstrates growth momentum through strategic partnerships, such as its March 2024 integration with Exiger's supply chain AI platform to enhance cyber defense visibility for critical industries.[1]
Founded in 2017, aDolus emerged from efforts supported by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to combat the rising threat of software supply chain attacks targeting critical infrastructure.[2] The team's initial focus was on developing scalable solutions for firmware and software security in ICS, IIoT, and IoT environments, evolving into a comprehensive AI-driven platform for continuous assurance.[2][3] Key early traction came from addressing real-world escalation in supply chain vulnerabilities, positioning aDolus as a pioneer in this niche before high-profile incidents amplified global awareness.[2]
aDolus rides the explosive growth in software supply chain security, fueled by incidents like SolarWinds and Log4j, alongside regulatory mandates (e.g., U.S. Executive Order on cybersecurity) demanding verifiable software integrity in critical infrastructure.[2] Timing is ideal amid rising OT/IoT proliferation in industries like energy, manufacturing, and healthcare, where legacy systems face modern threats; market forces include AI advancements enabling correlation at scale and geopolitical tensions amplifying supply chain risks.[1][3] By securing ICS/IIoT firmware, aDolus influences the ecosystem through partnerships, reducing breach surfaces and enabling safer digital transformation for vendors and operators.[1][2]
aDolus is poised for expansion as supply chain attacks evolve and AI regulations tighten, with potential for deeper integrations into enterprise platforms and global critical infrastructure mandates. Trends like zero-trust architectures and SBOM (Software Bill of Materials) enforcement will accelerate demand, potentially scaling their platform via acquisitions or further alliances. Their influence could grow to shape industry standards, transforming aDolus from niche innovator to essential guardian of secure software flows—securing the OT/IoT supply chain at its core.[1][2][3]