The investment marks a significant expansion phase for the Atlanta-based company, which currently manages machine identities for over 2,500 customers, including 40% of the Fortune 100. Keyfactor’s platform, known as the Trust Control Plane, aims to consolidate fragmented security tools into a single interface. This centralized approach provides visibility into cryptographic assets and automates lifecycle management, a necessity as machine identities now vastly outnumber human users.
Market demand is being driven by four converging trends: the rise of AI-driven identity sprawl, the shortening of certificate lifespans, evolving regulatory mandates, and the shift toward post-quantum cryptography. With the White House setting a 2030 deadline for the transition to quantum-safe standards, the pressure on government agencies and large enterprises to modernize has intensified. Keyfactor, which recently achieved FedRAMP certification, is positioning itself as the primary infrastructure provider for this transition.

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