About Kanonika
Security findings now grow faster than any team can fix them. AI accelerates both sides of the problem — surfacing vulnerabilities faster than ever, and creating new attack surface as AI agents generate code, run commands, and change infrastructure with less human oversight. Detection has been solved many times over; remediation is the bottleneck, and security teams are buried in a backlog manual work can't clear.
Kanonika exists to give those teams a way to fight back — to close the loop between detection and proof with a governed, verifiable execution layer, so remediation scales with automation instead of headcount.
The name comes from the Greek kanón (κανών) — a measuring rod, rule, or standard, and the root of the words canon and canonical. In the Greek Orthodox tradition, kanonikós means canonical and authoritative — recognized by, and in accordance with, the canon.
That is the idea Kanonika is built on: a single authoritative, canonical standard for security controls — and an authoritative, tamper-proof record of every change made against it. Security isn't a feature we added later; it's the premise the company is named for. Every action is cryptographically signed, every channel mutually authenticated, and every change recorded to an immutable ledger.
Jason has spent more than two decades building and securing enterprise infrastructure across financial services and media — including senior engineering and architecture roles at Scanline VFX (Netflix) and Sony Imageworks, running multi-cloud estates of thousands of systems.
Across that career he kept hitting the same wall: scanners surface thousands of findings, but actually closing them is manual, slow, and never-ending — and audit evidence is an afterthought. He founded Kanonika to build the closed-loop execution layer he wished he'd had: one that doesn't just find problems, but fixes them under your control and proves it.
Founder & Director, Kanonika Inc. · LinkedIn