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Opal Security Raises $23M and Expands Leadership Team to Unify Identity Governance Across Human, Non-Human, and Agentic AI

Business

Opal Security Raises $23M and Expands Leadership Team to Unify Identity Governance Across Human, Non-Human, and Agentic AI
Business

Business

Opal Security Raises $23M and Expands Leadership Team to Unify Identity Governance Across Human, Non-Human, and Agentic AI

2026-06-05 00:32 Last Updated At:00:40

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 4, 2026--

Opal Security, the AI-native access governance platform for every identity, today announced $23 million in new funding alongside five senior leadership appointments, including Chief Product Officer Sameer Mehta, who joins from identity security platform Veza, where he built products across non-human identity and access intelligence. The new funding was led by Greylock and Battery Ventures, with outside participation from Cambium Capital, and brings Opal's total funding to $59 million.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260604227625/en/

CEO Howard Ting, who arrived in December 2025, is a veteran of leading cybersecurity and enterprise software companies including Cyberhaven, Nutanix, Palo Alto Networks, and Redis. Among his first moves was promoting Alex Pien to Chief Technology Officer, anchoring the engineering organization as Opal scales. The new executive appointments include:

More than 60% of Opal's team has joined since the start of 2026, with hiring accelerating across engineering, product, and go-to-market. The growth tracks a shift in the market: AI agents are reshaping enterprise access, deployed faster than security teams can track them and often leveraging the standing, over-scoped credentials of users. Teams now need to see every agent alongside their human and service identities, scope each one to the task, and contain the blast radius when something breaks.

Opal brings agents into the same access graph, reviews, ownership, and policy-as-code as every other identity. In March, Opal launched the industry's first platform to see, encode, and enforce access governance, anchored by Paladin, an AI engine that evaluates requests and escalates only what needs a human.

Companies like Databricks, Notion, Cloudflare, Scale AI, CoreWeave, SpaceXAI, and Superhuman rely on Opal to modernize their identity stack as they adopt AI agents. Databricks runs 86,000 just-in-time access requests through Opal, and Mercari governs over 5,000 Okta entitlements through automated reviews. The pattern: just-in-time by default, access reviews that surface risk instead of rubber stamps, and permissions revoked the moment they are not needed. AI agents need the same controls, only at far greater scale and speed.

"Great operators don't chase markets—they pick the biggest problem and the best team to solve it with," said Howard Ting, CEO of Opal Security. "Sameer, John, Michael, and Christine have each built category-defining products, and they came to Opal for the same reason: governing access across every identity—human, service, and AI agent—is becoming one of the defining problems in security. The new funding gives us the resources to go solve it."

At Veza, Sameer led products in non-human identity security, access intelligence, and lifecycle management; earlier he ran a global product organization at Citrix, with prior roles at Symantec and Sun Microsystems Research Labs. John brings field and solutions engineering leadership from Cisco, where he led solutions engineering for AI security, with earlier roles at Valtix (acquired by Cisco), ThousandEyes, and Riverbed. Michael brings go-to-market and demand gen leadership from Clumio, Redis, and SignalFx. Christine comes from Salesforce and Box, most recently leading portfolio marketing for MuleSoft's API and agentic products.

"I've spent my career in identity and security, and it's rare to see a platform this aligned with where the market is heading in the era of AI," said Sameer Mehta, Chief Product Officer at Opal Security. "Access used to be a one-time decision. Today it's a continuous, high-volume problem across humans, services, and AI agents at machine speed. The real problem is control. Where most solutions stop at visibility or governance, what excites me about Opal is that they're defining the control plane for identity, enforcing access decisions in real time across every system."

About Opal Security

Opal has now raised $59 million from Greylock Partners, Battery Ventures, Box Group, SVCI, and Cambium Capital, and was recently named to Notable Capital's Rising in Cyber 2026 list of the 30 most promising private cybersecurity startups, as selected by 150 leading CISOs. Opal is the AI-native access platform that gives security teams real-time visibility, expressive policy-as-code, and direct control over every identity, from employees to service accounts to AI agents. As environments grow more dynamic and autonomous, Opal becomes a self-improving system that ensures resilience and the ability to move faster without increasing risk.

Read the full conversation with Sameer on theOpal blog. For more information, please visitopal.dev.

Five senior leaders who have joined Opal Security alongside CEO Howard Ting (left to right): Sameer Mehta, Alex Pien, John Clark, Michael Kwon, and Christine Ooley.

Five senior leaders who have joined Opal Security alongside CEO Howard Ting (left to right): Sameer Mehta, Alex Pien, John Clark, Michael Kwon, and Christine Ooley.

PHOENIX (AP) — A race to first based turned into a violent collision that sent two players sprawling onto the field and, eventually, into the dugout.

Arizona's Ildemaro Vargas and the Dodgers' Max Muncy are sore but otherwise OK, but, boy, what a crash.

“It was terrible,” Diamondbacks second baseman Ketel Marte said through an interpreter after hitting a walk-off homer in Arizona's 3-2 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Thursday night. “In my 10 years, I've never seen a collision like that.”

It came in the fifth inning when Muncy hit a ground ball down the line over first base.

Vargas fielded the ball behind the bag, spun around and, seeing pitcher Ryne Nelson wasn't covering, took off running, hoping to beat Muncy.

He didn't and the full-speed collision sent both players flying in the air, landing with a thud on opposite sides of the base.

A hush fell over the crowd as both players writhed in the dirt and trainers from both teams rushed out. Vargas and Muncy lay on the field for several minutes before slowly making their way to the dugouts.

“Those are the types of things that you see on the baseball field when two players are lying on the dirt after trying to make a hustle play,” Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said. “It tough to see, but they both got off the field.”

Muncy left with shortness of breath and was being evaluated for a concussion. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said he wouldn't play Friday against the Angels — it was already a scheduled day off — but could be available over the weekend.

Muncy told reporters he was a little banged up, but will be all right.

“I really hope Vargas is OK — I sent something over to him,” he said. "I’m hoping he’s doing all right and he’s not too bad. But just bad situation that looks like neither of us knew which direction to go.”

Vargas suffered bruises all down his left side — thigh, ribs and neck. X-rays were negative and he told Lovullo he would be ready to play on Friday, if needed.

“My whole body feels like I ran into a truck, but thankfully all the exams and tests were negative,” Vargas said through an interpreter.

It could have been much worse.

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB

Los Angeles Dodgers' Max Muncy (13) and Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman Ildemaro Vargas, right, collide on a play in the fifth inning of a baseball game, Thursday, June 4, 2026, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

Los Angeles Dodgers' Max Muncy (13) and Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman Ildemaro Vargas, right, collide on a play in the fifth inning of a baseball game, Thursday, June 4, 2026, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

Los Angeles Dodgers' Max Muncy (13) and Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman Ildemaro Vargas, center, reacts after colliding on a play in the fifth inning of a baseball game, Thursday, June 4, 2026, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

Los Angeles Dodgers' Max Muncy (13) and Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman Ildemaro Vargas, center, reacts after colliding on a play in the fifth inning of a baseball game, Thursday, June 4, 2026, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

Los Angeles Dodgers' Max Muncy reacts after colliding with Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman Ildemaro Vargas in the fifth inning of a baseball game, Thursday, June 4, 2026, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

Los Angeles Dodgers' Max Muncy reacts after colliding with Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman Ildemaro Vargas in the fifth inning of a baseball game, Thursday, June 4, 2026, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

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