Choose Binary Defense or DeepSeas
Choose Binary Defense if
- Mid-market and enterprise organizations with existing EDR/SIEM investments they want to keep
- Security teams that value proactive threat hunting and want deep technical partnership
- Organizations that prioritize data portability and want to avoid vendor lock-in
- You want direct Slack integration with your SOC
Choose DeepSeas if
- Mid-market and enterprise organizations with OT/ICS environments needing unified IT and OT threat monitoring
- Organizations wanting technology-agnostic MDR that works with existing security tool investments
- Companies in critical infrastructure, manufacturing, or energy sectors requiring specialized OT cybersecurity
What’s actually different
Buyer brief
Fit. Binary Defense and DeepSeas are both Pure-play MDRs that work with your existing tools. Binary Defense targets Mid-market and Enterprise organizations, while DeepSeas serves Mid-market and Enterprise.
FAQ
What is the main difference between Binary Defense and DeepSeas?
Binary Defense is a Pure-play MDR that is technology-agnostic (works with your existing tools). DeepSeas is a Pure-play MDR that is technology-agnostic (works with your existing tools). SLA commitments differ: Binary Defense offers ≤30 minutes, DeepSeas offers Not disclosed.
How do Binary Defense and DeepSeas differ in response capabilities?
Binary Defense supports 4 autonomous actions (endpoint isolation, network containment, account disable, custom playbooks) and approval is configurable. DeepSeas supports 5 autonomous actions (endpoint isolation, network containment, account disable, file quarantine, custom playbooks) and approval is configurable.
How does Binary Defense pricing compare to DeepSeas?
Binary Defense pricing: Not published. Custom quotes only.. DeepSeas pricing: Not published. Watch for with Binary Defense: MDR Plus features (deception, malware disruption) are add-ons beyond base MDR; IR is not included in base MDR, available as separate retainer. Watch for with DeepSeas: Pricing is opaque, no public pricing or seat minimums disclosed; Incident response (DFIR) is handled through external partners, not included in MDR.