Cyble Recognized in the 2026 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Cyberthreat Intelligence Technologies — and What Cyble Feels It Means for the Next Era of Threat Intel
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This morning, Cyble was recognized in the 2026 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Cyberthreat Intelligence Technologies as a Challenger.
I want to use this post for two things. First, to thank the people who got us here. Second, to share what we believe this recognition actually signals — because the more interesting story isn’t about Cyble at all. It’s about where this category is going.
A milestone for us, not a finish line
Six years ago, when we started Cyble, the threat intelligence market was a fragmented mix of feed aggregators, dark web monitoring point tools, and incident-response heritage vendors trying to retrofit themselves into a different decade. We saw a different future: one where intelligence is AI-native by default, unified across the surface and dark web, delivered straight into the SOC workflow, and built for the speed adversaries actually move.
We bet on that future hard. Today, several organizations across 50+ countries trust us to run that vision in production. And today, Gartner placed us in the Challengers Quadrant alongside what we believe are the most established names in the category.
For us, being named “a Challenger” isn’t a footnote. It’s a signal that Cyble is now operating at the level of the incumbents — with a sharper, AI-native foundation underneath. That’s the bet finally paying off in public.
What we believe this recognition signals about the category
Three things, in order of importance:
1. The category has changed. The buyer has too.
A decade ago, threat intelligence was a research function. It produced reports. Today, threat intelligence is an operational function. It produces actions. The teams winning in 2026 don’t have time for a 40-page weekly bulletin — they need a platform that triages noise into signal at AI-speed and pipes it into the workflows their analysts already use.
As we see it, the Magic Quadrant reflects that shift. The vendors moving up are the ones investing in operational depth, not just content depth.
2. Unified beats fragmented. Always.
The most consistent feedback we hear from CISOs is that they’re tired of stitching five tools together to investigate one threat. Dark web in one console. Brand monitoring in another. Attack surface somewhere else. Vulnerability prioritization in a fourth. Executive protection bolted on as an afterthought.
Cyble’s bet from day one: this should be one platform. One workbench. One source of truth for everything happening outside your perimeter. The market is finally catching up to that thesis, and the analyst community is recognizing it.
3. AI in CTI is past the demo phase.
Three years ago, “AI in threat intelligence” mostly meant “we used a model to cluster keywords.” Today, AI is doing the work — translating a Russian-language forum post into context-rich intelligence, correlating leaked credentials with actual customer accounts in real time, predicting which CVEs will be weaponized in the next 30 days. Our customers run this in production, every day.
We feel the Magic Quadrant recognition is, in part, recognition that this work is real now. It’s not a slide. It’s running in your SOC.
What it doesn’t mean
A few things I want to be careful about, because moments like this can encourage overstatement:
- This recognition is not an endorsement. Gartner does not endorse vendors. The Magic Quadrant is a research opinion, not a buying recommendation. If you’re a security leader making a CTI decision, please do the diligence you’d do anyway — POCs, customer references, hands-on evaluation against your real use cases.
- We are a Challenger, not a Leader. We’re proud of where we are positioned. We’re also clear-eyed about why we believe so: Leaders typically reflect a longer market tenure and broader feature surface, both of which compound with time. We have work ahead of us, and we know exactly where.
- A quadrant placement doesn’t change a single threat in your environment. The work is still the work. Adversaries don’t read research reports.
What we owe the people who got us here
This is the part I care about most.
To our customers: thank you. Every conversation about triage speed, dark web visibility, and SOC integration shaped what we built. You pushed us harder than any roadmap process ever could.
To the Cyble team — every researcher, engineer, designer, CSM, seller, partner manager, ops person, recruiter — this milestone is yours. I get to write the blog post. You did the work.
To the analysts and the broader research community: thank you for taking the time to understand what we’re building. The rigor in this category is what makes it credible.
What’s next
Three things you can expect from Cyble in the next 12 months:
- Deeper AI capabilities in the analyst workbench — predictive prioritization, automated investigation, language coverage in regions where adversaries are getting harder to track.
- Tighter SOC integration, including expanded native connectors and better evidence handoffs into your detection-engineering and IR workflows.
- Broader category coverage — third-party risk, executive protection, brand intelligence — all delivered in one pane of glass, not bolted on.
And in 18 months, we plan to be a different name on a different part of the quadrant. That’s the work.
If you want to read the report, we’ve made a complimentary copy available here: Access the report here.
If you want to talk about what this means for your CTI program, contact our team, here.
To everyone who’s been part of this journey — customers, Cyblers, partners, analysts — thank you.
We’re just getting started.
— Beenu Arora Co-Founder & CEO, Cyble
Gartner, Magic Quadrant for Cyber Threat Intelligence Technologies, Jonathan Nunez, Carlos De Sola Caraballo, Jaime Anderson, May 4, 2026.
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