Startup Lightrun has built an observability platform to identify and debug (remediate) code. “Code is becoming cheap but bugs are expensive,” Ilan Peleg, CEO said. That problem, meanwhile, has reached “an inflection point. Developers now can ship more code than ever before,” due to all the automation that is being used, thanks to AI. “But it’s still a very manual process to fix it when things go wrong.” Lightrun’s breakthrough has been to build an observability toolset that can monitor code just as it is in the IDE and understand how it will behave alongside code that is actively in production. Lightrun is then able to automatically make adjustments to the code as it moves into production to continue operating without interruption and crashes. It does this by way of being able to create AI-based simulations to understand that behaviour, and then to fix the code before issues arise. “This is the part where we are unique,” Peleg said. There are a lot of options for how Lightrun might develop, given how close observability sits to other activities in organizations. One of those is building tools more specifically for cybersecurity teams, given the obvious security implications that arise out of bugs. Another is potentially building some of its tooling even closer to the point of code creation, to make finding and fixing possible bugs even more efficient.