HyperSphere eliminates the worst part of encryption–dealing with the cost and risk of managing keys. And we do it without impacting business or sacrificing security. This is how encryption should have worked from the very beginning.
The security industry has spent decades building better locks: longer keys, more complex algorithms, more sophisticated vaults. But the fundamental problem was never the strength of the lock. It was that the key had to exist somewhere.
HyperSphere was founded on a single conviction: the only truly secure key is one that never persists in a form that can be stolen, leaked, or compelled. Our technology doesn't encrypt data and then manage the keys. It makes the concept of a recoverable key architecturally irrelevant.
The cloud has transformed the threat landscape. Data is no longer behind a perimeter, and attackers don't need to break in when they can steal a key. "Harvest now, decrypt later" attacks mean today's encrypted data is tomorrow's liability. HyperSphere was designed for this reality: our architecture assumes breach, assumes credential compromise, and renders both irrelevant to data security outcomes.
Validated at the highest defense-sector standards—including NSA/NIST-sponsored baselines and deployment with defense contractors—we are now bringing that same level of protection to enterprises that handle the data the world runs on.
We assume credentials will be compromised. We build so that when they are—and they will be—data remains non-actionable by design. Security through architecture, not hope.
Key management is an operational burden as much as a security problem. We eliminate the attack surface and the overhead simultaneously—because security that simplifies is security that gets deployed.
Seven Gartner recognitions. NSA and NIST-sponsored certifications. Defense contractor deployments. Every milestone has been independently verified before we put it in front of a customer.
Independent validation from the institutions that set the standard in defense and enterprise security.
The companies defining enterprise security over the next decade are making architectural decisions today. HyperSphere exists to make zero-management encryption the foundation those decisions are built on—across cloud, edge, and AI infrastructure.