RaySecur, a mailroom security startup, raises $3M in seed funding

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Raysecur says at least ten times a day someone sends a suspicious package containing powder, liquid, or some other kind of hazard. The
Boston, Mass.-based startup says its desktop-sized 3D real-time scanning technology, dubbed MailSecur, can intercept and detect threats in
the mailroom before they ever make it onto the office floor. Mailroom security may not seem fancy or interesting, but they&re a common
gateway into a corporate environment
They&re a huge attack vector for attackers — both physical and cyber
Earlier this year we wrote about warshipping, a &Trojan horse&-type attack that can be used as a way for hackers to ship hardware exploits
into a business, break the Wi-Fi, and pivot onto the corporate network to steal data. Now, the company has raised $3 million in seed-round
funding led by One Way Ventures, with participation from Junson Capital, Launchpad Venture Group, and also Dreamit Ventures, a
Philadelphia-based early stage investor and accelerator, which last year announced it would move into the early-stage security
space. Raysecur proprietary millimeter-wave scanner, MailSecur
(Image: supplied) Raysecur uses millimeter-wave technology — similar to the scanners you find at airport security — to examine
suspicious letters, flat envelopes, and small parcels
Its technology can detect powders as small as 2% of a teaspoon or a single drop of liquid, the company claims. The startup said the funding
will help expand its customer base
Although still in its infancy, the company has about ten Fortune 500 customers using its MailSecur scanner. Since it was founded in 2018,
the company has scanned more than 9.2 million packages. Semyon Dukach, managing partner at One Way Ventures, said the funding will help
&bring this compelling technology to an even broader market.& With warshipping, hackers ship their exploits directly to their target mail
room