Tesseral Raises $3.3M Seed to Bring Open Source Auth to B2B Software

While the AI compresses the life cycle of the development of B2B software, more applications arrive on the market than ever. But business buyers do not cut the corners on safety. Business quality standards such as SAML, SCIM and roles -based access control are no longer pleasant for these customers, they are the expectation. For developers, this is a problem: these features are notoriously difficult to implement and can distract from the shipment of products.
Enter
“Despite all the changes that will visit the Saas industry during the next decade, authentication is not going now, and the rapidly moving teams cannot afford to burn internal time and energy creation solutions,” said Ned O'Leary, co-founder and CEO of Teseral. “Tesseral authorizes startups with a secure production of production quality that is quick to implement, easy to maintain and secure.”
The co-founders Ned O'Leary and Ulysse Carion met while working at GEM, where they have linked to a shared enthusiasm to solve the problems that most people try to avoid. NED previously worked at BCG, specializing in mergers and acquisitions and business strategy. Ulysse, a veteran security engineer, has led identity efforts, notably SSO, authorizations and audit journalization, in the segment by the segment by his
Tesseral has a stacked start -up group, including Dalton Caldwell, Year's Director of Y combinator; Jessica Livingston and Paul Graham, Co-founders of Y combinator; Calvin French-Owen, co-founder and former director of segment technology; Steve Bartel and Nick Bushak, co-founders of GEM; and Mike Wiacek, founder of the staircase; among others.
“Everyone needs as much, but it's always surprisingly painful,” said Caldwell. “Ned and Ulysses have built something elegant that developers really want to use – and it's rare.”
With new capital in hand, Tesseral is expanding its open source platform to offer developers of flexibility and high growth companies the quality of business capacities they need to build with confidence.
The platform is open for early access to