In this episode of Across the Tech Pond, we sit down with HYCU founder and CEO Simon Taylor to unpack one of the most ambitious product announcements we have heard in the data protection space for some time. HYCU has built its reputation on SaaS data protection through its rCloud platform, protecting more than 103 SaaS, cloud, and on-prem data sources for thousands of customers worldwide. But now the company is pushing far beyond backup and recovery.
At the center of this conversation is the launch of HYCU aiR, a new AI-powered resiliency platform that lets organizations interact with their backup data using natural language. Simon explains how HYCU spent the last two years building a contextual AI engine capable of analyzing backup data across entire organizations to identify insider threats, data exposure risks, identity drift, compliance gaps, and operational vulnerabilities. Instead of having backup data sit untouched until disaster strikes, HYCU wants enterprises to actively interrogate and learn from it every day.
Throughout the discussion, Simon explains why he believes the cybersecurity industry is entering a machine-speed era in which human-led defenses alone can no longer keep pace with AI-powered threats, ransomware automation, and rogue agents operating across SaaS ecosystems. The conversation also explores why mid-market companies are increasingly overwhelmed by fragmented security tooling and how HYCU sees an opportunity to consolidate visibility, compliance, and resilience into a single platform extension layered on top of existing backup investments.
We also discuss early customer reactions to HYCU aiR, including examples of organizations uncovering previously invisible regulatory exposure and risky user behavior within days of testing the platform. Simon explains how channel partners are now reframing backup conversations around cybersecurity posture, governance, and AI readiness rather than focusing solely on recovery workflows.
Elsewhere in the episode, the team explores the wider implications of AI within enterprise infrastructure, the growing importance of context-rich datasets, and why Simon believes the future of cybersecurity will depend on connecting protection, detection, visibility, and recovery into a single intelligent ecosystem.
From Dell Tech World announcements to insider threat analysis and AI-native backup experiences, this episode offers a fascinating look at how one company is attempting to redefine the role of backup data in the AI era.
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