Spin.AI Acquires Revyz to Unify Data Protection Across Atlassian and Enterprise Cloud Apps

Organizations shouldn't have to choose between innovation, speed, and data protection.
Spin.AI's CEO on why the unified platform matters to enterprises managing multiple cloud applications.

In the ongoing effort to bring order to the sprawling complexity of enterprise cloud environments, Spin.AI has absorbed Revyz, a specialist in protecting Atlassian's Jira and Confluence platforms. The acquisition reflects a deepening conviction among security leaders that fragmentation itself has become a vulnerability — that managing a dozen separate tools across a dozen vendors is its own form of risk. By uniting Atlassian protection with coverage for Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, and Salesforce under one platform, Spin.AI is wagering that coherence, not just capability, is what modern organizations most urgently need.

  • Enterprises running Jira and Confluence at scale have long faced a quiet crisis: Atlassian's native backup tools leave dangerous gaps that ransomware, configuration drift, and outages can exploit.
  • The pressure to consolidate is no longer theoretical — nearly 70% of CISOs are actively dismantling vendor sprawl, driven by the recognition that complexity itself undermines the security it is meant to provide.
  • Spin.AI's acquisition of Revyz is a direct answer to customer demand, filling the one major coverage gap in its platform while handing Revyz customers access to a far broader suite of protections overnight.
  • The combined platform now shields over 1,500 organizations across six major cloud applications, positioning Spin.AI as a single-pane-of-glass solution at a moment when the market is actively rewarding consolidation over specialization.

Spin.AI, a Palo Alto AI-driven security company, has acquired Revyz, a firm that spent years solving a specific and stubborn problem: Atlassian's native tools for protecting Jira and Confluence simply aren't enough for enterprises operating at scale. Revyz built what was missing — automated backups with granular restore, ransomware protection, configuration drift detection, sandbox testing environments, geographic data controls, and resilience against Atlassian outages. That expertise now belongs to Spin.AI, while Revyz customers continue using the product they know, backed by a larger engineering and support organization.

The deal is less about one company buying another than about a broader reckoning in enterprise security. Organizations are drowning in point solutions — separate vendors for backup, for threat detection, for compliance, for posture management — and the weight of that complexity has become its own liability. A recent IANS study found that nearly seven in ten chief information security officers are actively working to reduce the number of security platforms they manage. Spin.AI's SpinOne platform, already recognized by Forrester as a strong performer in security posture management, now spans automated backup, ransomware defense, eDiscovery, archiving, data loss prevention, and posture management across six major cloud applications.

For Spin.AI founder and CEO Dmitry Dontov, the logic is straightforward: Atlassian coverage was the gap customers kept asking about, and Revyz closes it. For Revyz customers, the acquisition opens the door to protection across Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, and Salesforce — the broader cloud footprint their organizations already depend on. The combined platform now serves more than 1,500 organizations worldwide, and the bet underlying the deal is that enterprises will increasingly choose coherence over fragmentation when the stakes are their most critical data.

Spin.AI, a Palo Alto security company built around artificial intelligence, has acquired Revyz, a specialist in protecting Jira and Confluence installations. The move consolidates data protection across a sprawling ecosystem of enterprise tools—Atlassian's products alongside Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, and Salesforce—under a single platform. No financial terms were disclosed.

Revyz has spent years solving a specific problem: Atlassian's native backup tools leave gaps. Organizations running Jira and Confluence at scale need more than what comes in the box. They need automated backups that can be restored with precision, the ability to detect when configurations drift from their intended state, sandbox environments where changes can be tested before hitting production, controls over where data lives geographically, and access to their systems even when Atlassian itself goes down. Revyz built those capabilities. Now Spin.AI owns them, and Revyz customers will keep using the same product they know, but with the weight of Spin.AI's engineering, security, and support teams behind it.

The acquisition reflects a larger shift in how enterprises think about security. Rather than bolting together point solutions from a dozen vendors, organizations increasingly want one platform that handles multiple problems across multiple applications. A recent study by IANS, a cybersecurity research firm, found that nearly seven in ten chief information security officers are actively consolidating their security tools to reduce vendor sprawl. Spin.AI's SpinOne platform already serves more than 1,500 organizations worldwide and is recognized as a strong performer in Forrester's assessment of security posture management tools.

What Spin.AI gains from this deal is immediate: Atlassian protection, which customers have been requesting. What Revyz customers gain is access to a broader platform—one that now spans automated backup and granular restore, ransomware defense, eDiscovery, archiving, data loss prevention, and security posture management across six major cloud applications and productivity suites. The combined offering addresses a real tension in modern enterprise IT. Organizations want to move fast, innovate, and protect their data all at once. A unified platform, in theory, lets them do all three without juggling separate vendors for each concern.

Dmitry Dontov, Spin.AI's founder and CEO, framed the deal as solving that tension directly. Revyz customers now have access to protection for their mission-critical applications beyond Atlassian—Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, Salesforce. Spin.AI customers, meanwhile, get the Atlassian coverage they have been asking for. The second founder quoted in the announcement, representing Revyz, emphasized that the vision was always to expand beyond Atlassian into other cloud applications while adding serious security posture management capabilities. This acquisition makes that possible.

The deal is part of a broader consolidation wave in enterprise security. As organizations manage more applications, more data, and more complexity, the pressure to simplify their vendor relationships intensifies. Spin.AI is betting that customers will pay for the convenience and coherence of a single platform that understands their entire cloud footprint—and that Revyz's expertise in the Atlassian space is a valuable piece of that puzzle.

Organizations shouldn't have to choose between innovation, speed, and data protection. Now they don't have to.
— Dmitry Dontov, Founder and CEO, Spin.AI
Our vision has always been to expand data protection offering to mission-critical cloud apps beyond Atlassian and offer strong security posture management capabilities. This is now possible with the Spin.AI platform.
— Revyz founder (unnamed in source)
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why does Atlassian need a separate backup company? Doesn't Atlassian itself offer backup?

Model

Atlassian does, but it's basic. Revyz built the enterprise-grade version—granular restore, configuration drift detection, sandbox workflows, data residency controls. Things that matter when Jira or Confluence is mission-critical to your business.

Inventor

So this is really about filling a gap that Atlassian left open.

Model

Exactly. And now Spin.AI owns that gap-filler. They get Atlassian expertise; Revyz customers get access to protection for Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, Salesforce—the whole ecosystem.

Inventor

The press release mentions vendor consolidation. Is that just marketing, or is it real?

Model

It's real. Seventy percent of CISOs are actively trying to reduce the number of security vendors they work with. Managing ten different tools is expensive and chaotic. A unified platform is simpler, even if it costs more upfront.

Inventor

What happens to Revyz customers? Do they have to migrate?

Model

No. They keep using the same product. Spin.AI is just providing the infrastructure behind it now—better engineering, better support, access to a larger platform.

Inventor

And Spin.AI already protects 1,500 organizations. Does this acquisition make them a bigger player?

Model

It extends their reach into Atlassian shops, which is a significant market. But more importantly, it lets them offer a more complete solution. If you're already using Spin.AI for Google Workspace and Microsoft 365, now you can add Jira and Confluence protection without switching vendors.

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