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From the Ground Up: Abhay Bhargav Wants AI to Fix What’s Broken in Software Security

As software races ahead at a pace few organizations can control, security has quietly become one of the most fragile links in the modern digital economy. Abhay Bhargav, CEO of SecurityReviewAI, has built his career around confronting that reality head-on. With a background that spans ethical hacking, application security, and entrepreneurship, Bhargav is now using artificial intelligence to tackle one of the most persistent and underestimated problems in tech: how to design secure software at scale without grinding innovation to a halt.

Bhargav’s path into cybersecurity was unconventional. Trained as an accountant, he made an early decision to abandon finance in favor of technology, drawn to the problem-solving intensity of software systems. He began his career breaking applications through penetration testing, learning firsthand how attackers exploit design flaws long before code-level vulnerabilities appear. Over time, that offensive experience reshaped his perspective. The industry did not suffer from a lack of people who could attack systems; it suffered from a shortage of practical ways to defend them before they were deployed.

That insight pushed Bhargav toward security architecture and threat modeling, disciplines that promise enormous preventative value but are notoriously difficult to execute. In theory, threat modeling helps teams anticipate how an application could fail or be abused. In practice, it is slow, subjective, and dependent on scarce senior expertise. Large organizations may build thousands of internal applications while relying on a small group of security specialists to review them, creating backlogs that stretch for months and force teams to treat security as an afterthought.

SecurityReviewAI was created to break that cycle. The platform uses AI to absorb massive amounts of information about a system—design documents, architecture diagrams, codebases, chat discussions, and even recorded meetings—and translate it into actionable security insights in minutes rather than months. Instead of producing generic lists of risks, it maps real threats to actual components, helping teams understand what matters and why. The result is not just speed, but clarity.

A core principle behind the product is democratization. Bhargav believes security architecture should not live exclusively with a small, overworked group of experts. Development teams themselves need tools that allow them to reason about security early, without needing years of specialized training. By decentralizing threat modeling, organizations can shift security upstream, where it is cheaper, faster, and far more effective.

Concerns about AI accuracy are taken seriously within the platform’s design. SecurityReviewAI incorporates controls that require every recommendation to be grounded in real inputs, alongside a layered approach where one AI model generates findings and another evaluates them before they reach users. Human oversight remains built into every meaningful step, reflecting Bhargav’s view that security is too critical to leave unchecked. Automation accelerates the work, but accountability stays intact.

The platform also closes the gap between identifying risks and fixing them. It provides detailed mitigation guidance tailored to specific technologies, configurations, and environments, allowing teams to move quickly from insight to action. Over time, it tracks progress across reviews, ensuring unresolved risks remain visible while fixed issues do not reappear. Compliance is treated as a first-class concern, with threats, controls, and mitigations mapped directly to established frameworks so organizations can demonstrate their security posture at any moment.

Beyond technology, Bhargav’s leadership reflects hard-earned entrepreneurial lessons. He has learned that building a strong product is not enough without a clear understanding of who it is for and how it solves a specific problem. Rather than relying on aggressive outbound sales, he has focused on sharing knowledge publicly through content and education, allowing trust and credibility to drive demand organically.

As AI continues to reshape how software is built, Bhargav sees its greatest security impact in eliminating backlogs and restoring balance between speed and safety. AI may not replace human expertise, but in his view, it finally gives security teams a chance to get ahead of the problem instead of perpetually chasing it.

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