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IronVest develops a personal security and privacy super app and browser extension, based in New York, NY. The platform protects digital accounts across banking, investing, email, and health records using decentralized biometric authentication, masked emails, virtual credit cards, and phone numbers, serving over 200,000 users. It offers fraud prevention for both consumers and businesses, including an SDK for financial institutions to eliminate account takeovers, evolving from the Abine Blur service. The company has secured $23 million in seed funding and employs between 21-50 individuals, with an estimated valuation of $4.8 million. Lead investors include Accomplice, Norwest Venture Partners, Trust Ventures, Ulysses, and OurCrowd. IronVest was founded in December 2021 by Avi Turgeman, Kfir Yeshayahu, Yaron Dror, and Guy Bauman.
IronVest has raised $23.0M across 1 funding round.
IronVest has raised $23.0M in total across 1 funding round.
IronVest has raised $23.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $23.0M Seed in January 2022.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 1, 2022 | $23M Seed | Accomplice VC | OAK HC/FT, Joule Ventures, OurCrowd, Trust Ventures, Ulysses | Announced |
IronVest has raised $23.0M in total across 1 funding round.
IronVest's investors include Accomplice VC, Oak HC/FT, Joule Ventures, OurCrowd, Trust Ventures, Ulysses.
IronVest is a technology company building a security and privacy platform focused on biometric fraud prevention for consumers and financial institutions. It offers a browser extension and mobile app that generate masked emails, virtual credit cards, secure passwords, and persistent biometric authentication to block trackers, scams, and account takeovers.[1][2][4] Targeting consumers seeking privacy tools and banks/fintechs needing invisible, intent-centric verification immune to deepfakes and malware, IronVest solves online fraud by embedding protection in every interaction—free tier for basics, paid for advanced features like 2FA and SMS safeguards. With $23M in funding, including from Norwest Venture Partners, it shows strong growth momentum, evolving from consumer tools to enterprise SDKs released in 2023.[2][3][4]
IronVest traces its roots to Abine, a Boston-based privacy company that launched DoNotTrackMe in 2011 as a Firefox extension to block trackers.[1] Abine expanded with MaskMe for masked emails (free), phone numbers, and virtual cards (paid), then consolidated into Blur in 2014, replacing prior services with free/paid privacy masking.[1] Rebranded as IronVest in 2022 (initially from Blur), it shifted toward advanced biometric fraud prevention, releasing an SDK in September 2023 for financial institutions to verify identity and intent.[1][2] Headquartered in New York with around 25 employees and $5.3M revenue, it's led by a CEO & Co-Founder and CTO & Co-Founder, building on over a decade of consumer privacy innovation.[4]
IronVest rides the surge in AI-driven fraud, deepfakes, and account takeovers amid rising digital banking, where traditional 2FA fails against sophisticated attacks.[1][2] Its timing aligns with post-2022 privacy regulations and fintech growth, offering "frictionless safety" that scales from consumer apps to enterprise without disrupting UX.[3] Market forces like escalating cyber threats (e.g., SMS vulnerabilities) favor its biometric edge, influencing the ecosystem by powering trusted interactions for banks—potentially setting standards as SDK adoption grows.[2][5] By bridging consumer privacy tools to B2B fraud prevention, it accelerates secure fintech innovation.
IronVest is poised to dominate persistent authentication as fraud evolves with AI, expanding its SDK to more banks and launching consumer biometric upgrades. Trends like zero-trust models and deepfake proliferation will fuel demand, with Norwest backing enabling global scale. Its influence may grow by redefining prevention as proactive trust, evolving from privacy pioneer to fraud elimination leader—tying back to its core mission of seamless, embedded protection in an untrustworthy digital world.[2][3]