CyCraft’s founders joined representatives from the Taiwan Stock Exchange, Yuanta Securities, auditors, and legal advisors to celebrate the company’s listing on the TWSE Innovation Board.

Key Points of the Listing

  • Public Market Entry: CyCraft is the first “pure-play” AI-native cybersecurity firm to list on Taiwan’s Innovation Board, signaling a new asset class for regional investors.
  • Capital Strategy: The listing aims to accelerate international expansion, with a specific target of surpassing 50% overseas revenue by 2030 through organic growth and strategic M&A.
  • Proven Scale: The company’s platform currently manages over 600,000 sensors across government, financial, and semiconductor sectors throughout the Asia-Pacific.
  • Revenue Model: CyCraft operates on a subscription-based SaaS model, boasting a customer renewal rate of over 90% and 2025 annual revenue of NT$369 million.
  • Vertical Expansion: Beyond traditional enterprise security, the company is diversifying into emerging high-growth niches, specifically AI Governance (LLM security) and Unmanned Systems (Anti-drone defense).

TAIPEI, TAIWAN – Media OutReach Newswire – 10 February 2026 – CyCraft Technology Corporation (TWSE: 7823), Taiwan’s first pure-play AI-native cybersecurity company, has officially listed on the Taiwan Stock Exchange Innovation Board, marking a major milestone for Asia’s emerging AI-driven security leaders.

CyCraft is forged in one of the world’s most challenging cyber environments. Taiwan faces persistent and large-scale cyber threats from highly-motivated threat actors targeting government, semiconductor supply chains, financial systems, and critical infrastructure. Rather than theorizing about threats, CyCraft has spent years defending against them at national and industry scale.

That experience has produced real-world operational advantages global markets increasingly demand: early-warning intelligence, autonomous machine-speed defense, and field-proven AI automation that cannot be casually replicated.

As generative AI reshapes software development, many SaaS categories face commoditization through “vibe-coding.” Cybersecurity stands apart. Mission-critical defense requires real adversarial data, ultra-low latency, zero-configuration precision, continuous adaptation against sophisticated attacks, and regulatory-grade trust. These capabilities are not synthetic. AI does not replace cyber defense—it amplifies defenders who already operate in real operational environments.

CyCraft’s credibility is reinforced by third-party validation, including seven appearances in Gartner research, three MITRE ATT&CK evaluations with zero-configuration and zero-latency performance, and the “Next-Big” Award from former Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, recognizing CyCraft as the “TSMC of cybersecurity.”.

In 2025 alone, CyCraft handled multiple critical incidents for Taiwan-listed companies and completed over ten forensic investigations in support of cyber insurance engagements in Japan.

Chairman Benson Wu stated, “In Taiwan, with AI, we help secure the world. This listing accelerates our global expansion through organic growth and strategic M&A. Our goal is to surpass 50% overseas revenue by 2030 and build Asia’s most trusted AI-native cybersecurity brand.”

Disclaimer: The information contained herein does not constitute advice.

Why It Matters to ASEAN

  • Addressing the “Talent Gap”: ASEAN faces a severe shortage of cybersecurity professionals. CyCraft’s focus on autonomous, low-labor AI defense addresses this regional pain point by allowing organizations to scale their security without a proportional increase in headcount.
  • Regional Resilience: As ASEAN nations push for a “Digital Economy Framework Agreement,” unified AI-driven defense mechanisms become essential. CyCraft’s presence in Singapore and Japan already positions it as a key architect of a regional “joint defense” ecosystem.
  • Strategic Autonomy: Having a homegrown Asian champion in AI security reduces the region’s total reliance on non-Asian technology, fostering greater digital sovereignty across the ASEAN bloc.

Editor’s Take

For years, Taiwan has been known as the “Hardware Shield” of the world thanks to TSMC. CyCraft’s listing marks the beginning of Taiwan’s attempt to build a “Software Shield.” From a business perspective, this is a move to capture the “AI Guardrail” market. As every major corporation in Southeast Asia rushes to deploy Large Language Models (LLMs), they are realizing they have no way to secure them. CyCraft isn’t just selling security; they are selling the “insurance policy” that allows enterprises to actually use Generative AI without fear of data exfiltration or system misuse.