A secure enterprise microservices development firm based in Vancouver, British Columbia, Codezero, raised $3.5 million in seed funding.
Ballistic Ventures led the investment, with participation from AMEX, CVS, KPMG, and JPMorgan Chase’s James Routh, as well as GitHub CEO Thomas Dohmke, Nick Caldwell, and Marty Weiner from Microsoft, HubSpot, and Peloton. As part of the transaction, Ballistic Ventures General Partner Roger Thornton became a member of the Codezero Board of Directors.
The money will be used by the business to build out its partner network and enhance its sales and marketing departments.
Codezero is a microservices development firm led by CEO Reed Clayton. It uses an identity-aware overlay network to provide transparent security to DevOps. It enables DevOps teams to manage infrastructure, passwords, and secrets while utilizing their favorite tools inside a safe, simplified ecosystem by introducing the concept of dynamic Teamspaces, which promotes cooperation.
Overlay network Codezero Teamspaces is identity-aware. This implies that developers may quickly set up environments with services spanning local, cloud, and even their peers’ PCs. They don’t require any knowledge of networking, the underlying infrastructure, or direct access to credentials in order to accomplish this.
Developers worldwide may safely and easily access an identical-to-production locally available ephemeral environment using Teamspaces, which can span various cloud vendors.
“Our mission is to empower DevOps teams with collaborative, multi-cloud infrastructure that prioritizes both security and developer productivity,” Reed Clayton stated in response to the announcement. Ballistic, a cybersecurity-focused venture capital firm, is committed to this goal, and we’re excited to be included in their portfolio.
Concerning Codezero
Leading the way in microservices development, Codezero uses an identity-aware overlay network to give DevOps zero-trust security. Codezero, which pioneered the use of dynamic Teamspaces, enables unmatched collaboration by releasing DevOps teams from the headaches of infrastructure management and the traps of passwords and secrets, all while allowing them to continue using their favorite tools inside a streamlined, secure environment.