Selector, $32 million in funding... Leading the AI platform to solve online problems

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Selector announces a $37.5 million (approximately 54 billion KRW) valuation and has raised $32 million (approximately 46 billion KRW). This funding round was led by AVP, with participation from Ansa Capital, Two Bear Capital, Sinewave Ventures, Singtel Innovate, and other institutions. Fourteen months ago, Selector also raised $33 million (approximately 48 billion KRW) from an alliance including three major internet service providers.

Network troubleshooting often faces challenges because data packets must traverse multiple paths before reaching their destination. Requests between servers within data centers sometimes need to pass through several switches and firewalls. When failures occur, engineers must identify the faulty device causing the problem.

Troubleshooting long-distance connections is even more complex because it involves not only the enterprise’s own network equipment but also the infrastructure of internet service providers. Enterprises typically have limited visibility into such issues.

Headquartered in Santa Clara, California, Selector offers an AI platform that collects logs, metrics, configuration data, and other telemetry from customer enterprise networks. Its built-in AI models use the collected data to identify technical issues and generate alerts, automating tasks that would otherwise require manual discovery by engineers.

Selector identifies problems by mapping normal traffic patterns within enterprise networks and comparing new requests to detect anomalies, thereby indicating potential faults. It can also determine whether newly detected errors have occurred in the past.

The Selector platform presents identified issues as natural language alerts, clearly explaining the affected systems and root causes. Administrators can input questions in a chat box to obtain more information, such as requesting visualized network paths of specific application traffic.

The platform creates a digital twin of the infrastructure based on monitoring data, which can be used to update testing procedures and hardware upgrade plans. The funds from this round will be used to strengthen the platform and expand market reach. Selector states that its annual recurring revenue grew by 130% in 2025, primarily driven by Fortune 1000 companies, which contributed 80% of its total customers and played a key role in the company’s growth.

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