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Hammerspace and Secuvy Partner to Make At-Scale Data AI-Ready, Fast and Safe, Across On-Premises and Cloud

News

Hammerspace and Secuvy Partner to Make At-Scale Data AI-Ready, Fast and Safe, Across On-Premises and Cloud
News

News

Hammerspace and Secuvy Partner to Make At-Scale Data AI-Ready, Fast and Safe, Across On-Premises and Cloud

2026-03-10 20:00 Last Updated At:20:10

REDWOOD CITY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mar 10, 2026--

Hammerspace, the high-performance data platform for AI anywhere, today announced a partnership with Secuvy to deliver a “Data-First” approach that turns raw data into secure AI outcomes. Together, the companies unify distributed unstructured data into a global namespace and continuously discover, classify, catalog, and control it across on-premises and cloud.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260310160997/en/

“The bottleneck for AI isn't a lack of GPUs or models; it’s the friction of fragmented data. Most AI initiatives stall because teams can’t move data fast enough or safely enough to keep GPUs fed,” said Sam Newnam, Vice President of AI and Business Development at Hammerspace. “Hammerspace addresses data gravity by unifying access and mobilizing that data across the edge, data center, and cloud. By integrating Secuvy, we are delivering a complete, production-ready stack that combines high-performance data delivery with automated, data-aware security. This is the full-stack foundation enterprises need to finally move AI out of the lab and into global production.”

Enterprise AI is hitting a hard wall, not just with compute demands, but also due to data sprawl and rising costs with no proven ROI. Unstructured data is fragmented across edge sites, legacy NAS systems, high-performance file systems, object stores and multiple clouds, often governed inconsistently. AI pipelines amplify risk by pulling from large, diverse datasets that may include confidential information. Without continuous discovery and classification, organizations risk exposing sensitive data in AI pipelines, losing track of what was used, and missing high-value insights.

“The era of managing storage is over. By integrating Secuvy’s data intelligence with Hammerspace’s data platform, we are creating the 'Super-Brain' of AI Metadata,” said Mike Seashols, Chief Executive Officer at Secuvy. “This 'Data-First' approach ensures that performance, security, and placement instructions are no longer external afterthoughts, but inherent attributes of the data itself. By establishing this Trusted Data Plane, we provide a unified layer of file and data intelligence that governs the entire data estate, ensuring high-fidelity pipelines and proactive governance regardless of where that data sits.”

Together, Hammerspace and Secuvy keep data continuously AI-ready as it changes, so governance and access controls stay current from PoC to production.

Benefits of Hammerspace and Secuvy Partnership

Hammerspace and Secuvy enable a true Data-First model that makes data AI-ready. The integrated platform understands what the data is, where it lives, and the risk it carries, then controls how it’s used and where it can move, without forcing enterprises to rearchitect projects. Copying data drives up costs and increases risk: when data is duplicated across systems, governance breaks down and auditing, tracking, and securing it becomes difficult, allowing sensitive data to slip into AI pipelines without clear lineage or policy enforcement.

“Enterprises can’t scale AI securely if they don’t know what data they have, or where sensitive data is hiding,” said Jack Hogan, Vice President of Advanced Solutions at SHI. “The Hammerspace and Secuvy integration gives customers a global view of unstructured data plus continuous discovery and classification, so they can enforce governance without breaking workflows or proliferating copies. SHI can integrate this into existing environments to help teams move faster, with the controls needed for production AI.”

With the Hammerspace + Secuvy “Data-First” integration, organizations can make data AI-ready and enable:

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About Hammerspace

Hammerspace is the high-performance data platform built to simplify and optimize AI infrastructure at scale. It makes all your data immediately accessible – anywhere across on-premises and cloud environments – without copying or migrating data into new silos. By integrating with existing storage, networking, and applications, Hammerspace creates a unified, high-speed data backbone for AI, enabling organizations to accelerate every stage of the AI pipeline while eliminating data silos.

About Secuvy

Secuvy is a Data Intelligence Platform that provides data security posture management (DSPM) for unstructured data across hybrid and multi-cloud environments. Secuvy discovers and classifies sensitive data using AI-driven analysis, assesses exposure and access risk, and delivers continuous visibility and governance controls to help organizations reduce risk and maintain compliance.

The Integration of Hammerspace and Secuvy: A Data-First Model that Makes Data AI-Ready

The Integration of Hammerspace and Secuvy: A Data-First Model that Makes Data AI-Ready

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russian and Ukrainian officials are making contradictory claims of battlefield successes in their 4-year-old war, with Ukraine saying it has pushed Moscow’s forces back in some places on the front line but the Kremlin insisting that Russia’s invasion of its neighbor is making progress.

At the same time, Russia’s almost daily aerial attacks on civilian areas of Ukraine continue. Three powerful glide bombs struck the center of the eastern Ukrainian city of Sloviansk, killing four people, the head of the Donetsk regional military administration, Vadym Filashkin, said Tuesday. At least 16 other people, including a 14-year-old girl, were wounded.

Overnight drone strikes on three other Ukrainian cities wounded at least 17 people, including two children, emergency services said Tuesday.

Ukraine’s air force said that it shot down 122 out of 137 drones that Russia launched during the night.

U.S.-brokered talks between Russia and Ukraine are on hold as Washington’s attention is gripped by the Iran war, which has drawn the international spotlight from Ukraine’s plight as it strives to hold back Russia’s bigger army.

Despite being short of soldiers, Ukrainian forces have recently retaken nearly all the territory of the southeastern Dnipropetrovsk industrial region during a counteroffensive, driving Russian troops out of more than 400 square kilometers (150 square miles), Maj. Gen. Oleksandr Komarenko said in an interview published Tuesday by local media outlet RBC-Ukraine.

He described the overall situation on the front line as difficult but under control, with the heaviest fighting continuing near Pokrovsk in eastern Ukraine and Oleksandrivka in the south, where he said Russian forces have concentrated their main effort.

There was no independent verification of his description of the military situation.

However, the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, said late Monday that recent Ukrainian counterattacks “are generating tactical, operational and strategic effects that may disrupt Russia’s spring-summer 2026 offensive campaign plan.”

Meanwhile, a Kremlin aide said that Russian President Vladimir Putin told U.S. President Donald Trump late Monday that Russian forces are “advancing rather successfully” in Ukraine.

That progress should “encourage” Kyiv to “move toward a negotiated settlement of the conflict,” Yuri Ushakov told reporters — even though Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has repeatedly demanded a lasting peace deal and European governments accuse Putin of feigning interest in talks while the Russian military keeps hammering Ukraine.

The Kremlin is hoping that the Iran war will bring it a financial windfall from rising oil prices, distract global attention from the Ukraine war, run down Western arsenals and force the U.S. and its NATO allies to reduce military support for Kyiv.

Zelenskyy, meanwhile, is hoping that by supplying its cutting-edge and battle-tested drone technology to the United States and its Gulf partners for the war in the Middle East, Ukraine will win more international diplomatic leverage against Moscow.

He is also seeking a reciprocal supply of advanced American-made air defense missiles Ukraine needs to counter Russia’s attacks.

Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Rescuers put out the fire at a residential neighbourhood following Russia's drone attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine, late Monday, March 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrii Marienko)

Rescuers put out the fire at a residential neighbourhood following Russia's drone attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine, late Monday, March 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrii Marienko)

Rescuers put out the fire at a residential neighborhood following Russia's drone attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine, late Monday, March 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrii Marienko)

Rescuers put out the fire at a residential neighborhood following Russia's drone attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine, late Monday, March 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrii Marienko)

People look at fragments of a Russian drone that hit residential neighbourhood during air attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine, late Monday, March 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrii Marienko)

People look at fragments of a Russian drone that hit residential neighbourhood during air attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine, late Monday, March 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrii Marienko)

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