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Monday, June 22, 2026
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IBM and Red Hat Launch $5 Billion Open-Source AI Security Initiative

written by Sam Davies · 3 weeks ago · 0 comments

IBM and its subsidiary Red Hat have launched Project Lightwell, an ambitious $5 billion open-source security initiative that will deploy more than 20,000 engineers alongside AI-powered tools to help enterprises systematically identify and remediate vulnerabilities across complex software supply chains.

The initiative targets one of the most pressing challenges in enterprise technology: the growing attack surface created by the widespread adoption of open-source software components. As organizations build applications on top of thousands of open-source libraries and dependencies, the ability to track, assess, and fix security flaws across that entire stack has become critically important.

Project Lightwell will leverage AI to automate much of the vulnerability detection and prioritization work that currently requires significant manual effort from security teams. The AI tools are designed to scan codebases at scale, identify dependencies with known vulnerabilities, and in many cases suggest or automatically generate patches.

The involvement of Red Hat brings substantial credibility to the initiative. As one of the world’s leading contributors to the Linux kernel and other foundational open-source projects, Red Hat has deep roots in the open-source security community and strong relationships with the enterprise customers who depend most heavily on open-source infrastructure.

IBM’s investment signals the company’s belief that enterprise security, powered by AI, represents one of the most important growth opportunities in technology. Organizations across every industry are grappling with increasing cyber threats while simultaneously expanding their reliance on open-source components — making a well-resourced, AI-augmented security initiative directly relevant to their needs.


Sam Davies

Sam Davies is a journalist who covers technology, books, IT, and business. His reporting breaks down complex topics into clear, practical stories that readers can act on. Over the years, he has written about emerging software, hardware launches, publishing trends, and the companies shaping each sector. He focuses on the questions readers actually ask, whether that means explaining a new IT system, reviewing a recent release, or tracking how a business grows. His work blends technical detail with plain language, making him a trusted voice for anyone who wants to understand where technology and commerce are headed.

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