Fraud Management & Cybercrime
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Social Engineering
Private Equity Firm Says It’ll Take Several Weeks to Pinpoint Scope of Jan. 16 Hack

An unauthorized third-party accessed certain information systems last month from Insight Partners through a sophisticated social engineering attack, the private equity giant revealed Tuesday.
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New York-based Insight said it will take the next several weeks to determine the scope of the Jan. 16 incident with the support of third-party cybersecurity experts, a forensic and eDiscovery expert, and external legal counsel. Based on what is known, Insight said it doesn’t believe there will be any material impact on portfolio companies, Insight funds or other stakeholders.
“As soon as this incident was detected, we moved quickly to contain, remediate, and start an investigation within a matter of hours,” Insight said in a statement. “We notified stakeholders connected to Insight in January to alert them and encourage vigilance and tightened security protocols irrespective of having shared data compromised. We also notified law enforcement in relevant jurisdictions.”
Insight said there’s no evidence the threat actor was present after Jan. 16, and no additional disruption to the private equity firm’s operations as a result of the incident. The private equity said it’ll update any impacted individuals once information becomes available during its investigation (see: Detectify Eyes AppSec Expansion After Insight Partners Buy).
“Trust is integral to everything we do at Insight Partners,” the private equity firm said in its statement. “Accordingly, we take data security extremely seriously.”
Insight didn’t provide any more details about the nature of the security incident and didn’t say whether any data was stolen from its systems. The private equity firm also didn’t indicate whether the incident caused any disruptions to its business.
Insight Partners had more than $90 billion in regulatory assets under management as of Sept. 30, 2024. Over the past three decades, the private equity firm has invested in more than 800 companies and has seen more than 55 portfolio companies achieve an initial public offering. Insight has a major footprint in cybersecurity, with 60 current investments and 10 prior investments, according to the firm’s website.
Some of Insight’s notable cybersecurity investments include: Wiz, where Insight co-led its $100 million Series A in 2020; Armis, which Insight bought in 2020 at a $1.1 billion valuation; Island, where Insight led its $115 million Series B in 2022; Transmit, where Insight co-led its $543 million Series A in 2021; and Recorded Future, which Insight bought for $780 million and sold to Mastercard in 2024 for $2.65 billion.