JetStream Security announced that it has raised $34 million in seed funding to address a growing challenge facing enterprises adopting artificial intelligence: how to govern and trust AI systems deployed across their organizations. The funding round was led by Redpoint Ventures and included participation from the CrowdStrike Falcon Fund, along with several notable angel investors, including George Kurtz of CrowdStrike, Assaf Rappaport of Wiz, and Frederic Kerrest of Okta.
The company was founded to tackle what it describes as a widening gap between the rapid pace of AI deployment and organizations’ ability to monitor, control, and understand those systems. Enterprise leaders are increasingly deploying AI agents, copilots, and custom models, yet many lack visibility into how those systems operate, what data they access, who is responsible for them, or how much they cost to run. According to JetStream Security, this lack of governance is becoming a key barrier preventing AI projects from moving beyond experimentation into full production environments.
The company cites a broader trend across enterprises where enthusiasm about AI’s potential return on investment is high, but operational deployment remains limited. While a large majority of executives believe AI will deliver meaningful business value, only a minority of organizations have successfully transitioned most of their AI experiments into production systems. JetStream Security argues that this gap is primarily a governance challenge rather than a technological limitation.
JetStream’s platform is designed to provide a governance layer for enterprise AI environments. At the core of the system are what the company calls AI Blueprints, dynamic graphs that map how AI systems operate in real time. These Blueprints show relationships among AI agents, the models they rely on, the data they access, the tools they use, and the identities or access keys involved in each action. By capturing runtime behavior rather than relying on static documentation, the platform aims to give organizations continuous visibility into how their AI infrastructure behaves.
The Blueprints are intended to function as a living operational record of AI workflows. They can identify deviations from authorized behavior, track how systems evolve over time, and support governance processes as teams update or modify their AI deployments. The system also tracks the cost of AI operations, showing how much individual agents cost to run and which teams or owners are responsible for those expenses.
JetStream Security was founded by Raj Rajamani, Jared Phipps, Jatheen Anand, and Venu Vissamsetty. The leadership team previously held roles across several prominent cybersecurity and infrastructure companies including CrowdStrike, SentinelOne, Cohesity, and Dazz. Their experience across security platforms and enterprise infrastructure shaped the company’s focus on governance as a prerequisite for scaling AI adoption.
The company says it is already working with Fortune 500 organizations that are seeking better ways to move AI initiatives from pilot programs into production environments. According to JetStream Security, many enterprises have developed promising AI agents but are hesitant to deploy them widely because they lack the ability to verify, govern, and explain how those systems operate.
JetStream plans to use the new funding to expand its engineering, product, and go-to-market teams as it continues building its AI governance platform. The company’s broader goal is to create infrastructure that enables enterprises to deploy AI systems with greater transparency, accountability, and operational control.
KEY QUOTE:
“Leaders are being asked to bet their businesses and careers on systems they can’t fully see, explain, or control. That’s where trust breaks down. With AI Blueprints and our identity and keying and AI StreamContext™ technology, we give teams a clear, practical way to understand what their AI is doing, manage risk in real time, and move from experimentation to production with confidence. Our goal is simple: help companies scale AI responsibly, without slowing innovation.”
Raj Rajamani, CEO of JetStream Security

