Censys continued to sharpen its focus on security operations this week, emphasizing deeper integration of its Internet intelligence across leading SOC platforms. The company highlighted new and expanded connectors with Splunk, Microsoft Sentinel, Google SecOps, Cisco Splunk SOAR and ES, and other AI and SOAR tools to embed external attack surface data directly into existing workflows.
Claim 55% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
Censys now reports more than 55 integrations with over 45 technology partners, underscoring a deliberate ecosystem strategy. By positioning its telemetry as a foundational intelligence layer rather than a standalone tool, the company aims to accelerate alert triage, reduce manual enrichment, and increase automation within enterprise security stacks.
The firm also showcased Censys Assistant, an AI-driven capability in its Attack Surface Management platform that allows analysts to query their exposure with natural-language questions. This feature is intended to lower the skill barrier for using the platform, streamline decision-making, and potentially increase user adoption and customer stickiness among security teams.
On the research and brand-building front, Censys launched the biweekly Censys ARC Brief newsletter and the ARC Flash webcast to provide recurring threat intelligence content. Early topics include nation-state and industrial control system threats, which may help the company align with high-value, mission-critical use cases for enterprise and government-linked clients.
Censys ARC researchers also drew attention to a case study on the Rhadamanthys infostealer campaign presented at the SANS CTI Summit 2026. The company stressed the legal and procedural limits of private-sector action against malware operations and called for clearer collaboration frameworks between industry and law enforcement, reinforcing its role within broader cybersecurity ecosystems.
Collectively, the week’s developments point to a strategy centered on platform integrations, AI-assisted workflows, and thought-leadership in threat intelligence. While no financial metrics were disclosed, these moves appear oriented toward improving product stickiness, expanding addressable markets through partners, and bolstering Censys’s competitive position in external attack surface management and cyber analytics.

