Cybersecurity Firm CyberPeace Grows 25%, Bets on SOC 360
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Cybersecurity Firm CyberPeace Grows 25%, Bets on SOC 360

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By MBN Staff | MBN staff - Tue, 01/13/2026 - 14:15

Cybersecurity firm CyberPeace closed the 2025 fiscal year with a 25% revenue increase and a strategic pivot that places its channel ecosystem at the center of its 2026 operations. This transition focuses on the commercial launch of the SOC 360 platform to mitigate threats from AI and comply with evolving regional regulations.

Alejandro Romero, CEO, CyberPeace, explains that the expansion of the company is the result of a shift in market maturity where cybersecurity is no longer an optional expenditure but a regulatory necessity. "In Mexico, regulation exists for financial institutions through the CNBV, but in Chile, it extends to critical industries like logistics, transportation, and infrastructure," says Romero. "That level of maturity changes the conversation from attempting to convince companies to invest in security to helping them comply with the law."

The trajectory of CyberPeace reflects a transition from a service-based model to the development of proprietary intellectual property. Romero tells MBN that the company differentiates itself by operating as a dedicated cybersecurity managed services provider rather than a traditional solutions integrator. This approach, which he describes as the "McDonaldization of cybersecurity," seeks to offer standardized, accessible, and end-to-end solutions that include incident response, audits, and proactive monitoring.

Between 2024 and 2025, the company identified that post-pandemic trends such as remote work and e-commerce increased corporate vulnerability. This period served as a testing ground for attackers who utilized personalized phishing and adaptive malware. Consequently, the company expanded its footprint to Barcelona, Brazil, and Chile to observe how different regions manage these threats. The integration of these global insights allowed the company to realize that traditional defense models, which rely on the subsequent correlation of event logs, are insufficient against modern, high-speed attacks.

The company reports that its international operations and the Mexican market have converged. While Mexico remains a primary target for cyberattacks, it has also become a hub for firms developing defensive technologies. This dual role motivated the company to restructure its internal operations to support a more robust partner ecosystem, ensuring that cybersecurity is integrated into all levels of technological infrastructure.

The primary objective for 2026 is the commercial launch of SOC 360 in March. This platform represents the culmination of internal development and is designed to provide real-time visibility into the cybersecurity maturity level of an organization. Unlike legacy systems, SOC 360 utilizes AI to analyze telemetry from multiple data sources, which reduces alert fatigue and enables automatic remediation.

The platform functions as an agnostic layer that integrates with existing security tools. It assigns a quantitative score based on recognized frameworks, allowing executives to understand their defensive posture. According to Romero, the company is now bringing to the market the same technology that its internal analysts have utilized for several years. This move is intended to empower channels to offer managed services without requiring their own extensive security infrastructure.

The role of the channel is vital because of the ongoing trend toward vendor consolidation. Romero notes that customers prefer to centralize their technological needs with a limited number of trusted partners. If a channel already provides managed printing or cloud services, it is now expected to provide security as well. CyberPeace positions itself as an enabler for these partners by providing technical training, documentation, and a platform that complements their existing portfolios.

To support this technical evolution, CyberPeace is collaborating with EdgeNet to develop data centers and a Mexican cloud environment optimized for AI. This strategy includes a new facility in Merida, Yucatan. The company selected this location because of the concentration of academic talent and the interest of the local government in cybersecurity initiatives. Romero emphasizes that the goal is to build Mexican technology using local talent for both domestic and global markets.

As the company enters 2026, it faces a landscape where the adoption of AI by attackers outpaces the speed of regulation. To address this, the company focuses on creating a compliance infrastructure that anticipates legislative shifts, such as the General Data Protection Regulation in the United Kingdom and the European Union. By aligning technical innovation with regulatory requirements, the company aims to maintain its 25% growth rate and secure its position as a strategic partner in the Americas and the European Union.

The company expects that the integration of SOC 360 into the channel ecosystem will facilitate a more proactive defense mechanism for organizations. This shift moves the industry away from reactive measures and toward a model where intelligence is generated and acted upon in real time. The focus remains on providing clear, customized solutions that protect the entire corporate infrastructure against evolving threats like social engineering and automated fraud, among many others.

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