AI company Dream triples value to $3 billion in funding round

AI company Dream triples value to $3 billion in funding round



Dream, an Israeli artificial intelligence company that provides AI and cybersecurity services to governments and critical infrastructure operators, has raised $260 million at a $3 billion valuation.

Bicycle Capital and Group 11 led the round, which nearly tripled its valuation from $1 billion in February 2025, Dream co-founders Shalev Hulio and Sebastian Kurz said in an interview. Other investors include Bain Capital Ventures, Antler and Tru Arrow Partners.

Hulio rose to prominence as a co-founder and former chief executive officer of NSO Group, maker of the controversial spy software Pegasus. He founded Dream in 2023 alongside Gil Dolev and Kurz, a former chancellor of Austria.

After initially focusing on AI-based cyber defense for nation-states, the company is now rolling out a custom AI platform for governments and state-owned enterprises seeking more control over their data and infrastructure.

“As AI becomes central to national security, economy and public services, governments face a fundamental choice: depend on systems they do not control from the US or China, for example, or build capabilities they fully own. Dream was founded to eliminate that trade-off,” said Hulio.

The issue of tech sovereignty took on even greater significance last week, when the White House decided to withhold Anthropic PBC’s latest AI models from foreign nationals.