Web3 security giant CertiK has announced a bold roadmap to become the first publicly traded company in the Web3 infrastructure sector. The plan is backed by a major strategic investment from Binance, which has now become CertiK's largest investor. This move is positioned as a critical step to scale institutional-grade security and regulatory tooling for the broader crypto market.
CertiK's CEO and co-founder, Ronghui Gu, stated that taking the company public is a "natural next step" in its mission to strengthen trust, security, and transparency across the Web3 ecosystem. The firm is framing a potential listing as a maturity milestone, aiming to align its growth with the rigorous expectations of institutions, regulators, and enterprise customers who demand measurable transparency and operational rigor.
At the core of this institutional push is Skynet Enterprise, an enterprise-grade security platform built for real-time on-chain monitoring, risk visibility, and high data quality. The platform provides dashboards and alerting systems designed to meet the needs of large institutions and regulators, allowing security incidents to be monitored as they happen. CertiK is actively working with regulatory bodies to implement Skynet Enterprise, signaling that compliance is becoming an integrated product feature.
Technologically, CertiK is doubling down on its proprietary Spoq engine, an AI-enhanced formal verification framework. This engine is designed to improve the scalability and execution efficiency of formal verification, delivering a higher level of mathematical certainty for smart contract audits than manual review alone. This is targeted at risk-averse institutional clients who treat smart contract risk as operational risk.
The company cites impressive scale metrics to support its ambition: over 5,000 enterprise clients, more than $600 billion in assets secured, and over 180,000 vulnerabilities detected. CertiK also claims a valuation above $2 billion and is backed by top-tier investors. A successful public listing would not only spotlight the critical but often under-discussed security layer of crypto but could also reset how investors value compliance-first, enterprise-facing crypto businesses, potentially inspiring copycats in the sector.