PlaxidityX vs Upstream Security
PlaxidityX
PlaxidityX, formerly Argus Cyber Security, is one of the longest-established automotive cybersecurity vendors, founded in 2014 and rebranded in August 2024. It delivers a unified Vehicle Detection and Response (VDR) platform that integrates embedded in-vehicle protection with cloud intelligence for threat detection and prevention. The company was acquired by Continental in 2017 and operates within its Elektrobit subsidiary, giving it Tier-1 scale and direct OEM access. Its portfolio spans intrusion detection agents, keyless-theft prevention, fleet monitoring, and a DevSecOps platform for secure automotive software development.
Pros
- Decade-long track record and pioneer status in automotive cybersecurity
- End-to-end coverage from embedded in-vehicle agents through to cloud analytics
- Backed by Continental, giving Tier-1 scale and established OEM relationships
- Strong IP portfolio and partnerships with NXP, AWS, Google, and IBM
Cons
- Enterprise OEM and Tier-1 sales model with no public pricing
- As a Continental-owned entity, roadmap is tied to the parent's automotive strategy
- Embedded-agent products require ECU integration, lengthening adoption cycles
Pricing: Custom (contact sales)
Upstream Security
Upstream Security operates a cloud-native, agentless AI platform purpose-built for connected vehicles and mobility IoT. It ingests telematics, OTA, diagnostic, and dealership data to deliver cybersecurity detection and response (V-XDR), automotive threat intelligence, and data-driven applications. Upstream pairs its platform with a managed 24/7 Vehicle Security Operations Center and monitors tens of millions of vehicles, making it one of the largest-scale players in connected-vehicle security. Because it works server-side without in-vehicle agents, it is typically deployed alongside embedded ECU protection rather than replacing it.
Pros
- Operates at massive scale, monitoring tens of millions of vehicles and devices
- Agentless, cloud-native architecture needs no in-vehicle software footprint
- Combines a security platform with a fully managed vSOC and dedicated threat intelligence
- Well-funded and established, with a US-based vSOC supporting North American OEMs
Cons
- Server-side focus complements rather than replaces in-vehicle ECU protection
- Enterprise sales model with no public pricing
- Effectiveness depends on the breadth and quality of vehicle data feeds ingested
Pricing: Custom (contact sales)