Dividend Power Score
A single, comprehensive score designed to measure the true strength of a company’s dividend.
This score combines three essential pillars of dividend quality:
Consistency – Measures how reliable the dividend has been over time, focusing on payment history, stability, and the absence of cuts or suspensions.
Payability – Assesses the company’s financial ability to sustain its dividend, taking into account cash flow, earnings coverage, balance sheet strength, and overall financial health.
Growth – Evaluates the long-term growth of both the dividend and the company’s share price, highlighting businesses that consistently increase payouts while creating shareholder value.
Higher scores identify companies that have historically delivered dependable income alongside sustained dividend growth and long-term capital appreciation.
Company Overview
Cyabra, Inc. is a technology company specializing in social media intelligence and digital risk analytics, operating at the intersection of cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, and data analytics. The company develops software platforms designed to identify, analyze, and mitigate online threats such as coordinated disinformation campaigns, fake accounts, online manipulation, and reputational attacks across major social media networks. Its solutions are primarily used by enterprises, public-sector organizations, and security-focused entities seeking visibility into harmful or inauthentic online activity.
The company’s core value proposition centers on its ability to analyze large-scale social data using AI-driven behavioral and network analysis to distinguish authentic users from automated or coordinated inauthentic actors. Cyabra was founded in 2018 and emerged from the Israeli cybersecurity ecosystem, leveraging expertise developed in intelligence and defense-related technology fields. Public information indicates that the company remains privately held; no confirmed SEC filings or audited public financial disclosures are available as of the latest reporting period. Data regarding revenue scale or profitability is inconclusive based on available public sources.
Business Operations
Cyabra’s operations are primarily organized around a single integrated software platform, commonly referred to as Cyabra Platform, which provides social threat intelligence, narrative analysis, and detection of coordinated inauthentic behavior. Revenue generation is understood to be driven mainly by enterprise and government contracts, typically structured as subscription-based software licenses and professional services engagements, though specific revenue segmentation has not been publicly disclosed.
The company’s technology stack includes proprietary AI models, machine learning classifiers, and large-scale data ingestion systems designed to monitor open-source social platforms. Cyabra operates internationally, serving customers in both the public and private sectors, including corporations, government agencies, and organizations involved in national security, brand protection, and election integrity. No publicly confirmed joint ventures or majority-owned subsidiaries have been disclosed, and information on strategic partnerships is limited and not consistently verified across independent sources.
Strategic Position & Investments
Strategically, Cyabra positions itself as a specialist in online influence operations and disinformation detection, differentiating from traditional cybersecurity firms by focusing on narrative manipulation and social network behavior rather than network or endpoint security. Growth initiatives described in public communications emphasize expanding platform capabilities, increasing adoption among government and enterprise customers, and addressing emerging risks related to AI-generated content and coordinated influence campaigns.
Available information indicates that Cyabra has raised capital from private investors, including venture capital and strategic investors, to support product development and market expansion. However, specific investment amounts, valuations, and investor rights are not consistently reported across multiple independent sources. There are no verified disclosures of major acquisitions or divestitures, and no confirmed portfolio companies or spin-offs. Any involvement in emerging sectors such as generative AI or election security is based on product application rather than disclosed standalone business units.
Geographic Footprint
Cyabra maintains its operational roots in Israel, which serves as a key center for research and development. The company is also reported to have a presence in the United States, supporting sales, customer engagement, and partnerships in the North American market. These regions represent the company’s primary operational and commercial focus based on available public information.
Beyond its core locations, Cyabra’s platform is designed to analyze global social media activity, giving it indirect operational relevance across Europe, Latin America, and other regions where customers face online influence and reputational risks. However, there is no verified public data confirming permanent offices, subsidiaries, or localized operations outside Israel and the United States. Details on international revenue distribution remain undisclosed.
Leadership & Governance
Cyabra was founded by entrepreneurs with backgrounds in intelligence analysis and cybersecurity, shaping its focus on national security–grade social intelligence tools. The company is led by an executive team responsible for strategy, product development, and global expansion, though governance details typical of public companies—such as board committee structures—are not publicly available.
Key executives publicly associated with the company include:
- Dan Brahmy – Co-Founder & Chief Executive Officer
- Yossef Naar – Co-Founder & Chief Technology Officer
- Ranit Tal – Chief Operating Officer
- Shir Alon – Chief Product Officer
Leadership communications emphasize a mission-driven approach centered on protecting democratic processes, brands, and organizations from online manipulation. Information regarding independent directors, formal board composition, or shareholder governance practices is limited, and data is inconclusive based on available public sources.