Company Description
CLBTW is the warrant security linked to Cellebrite DI Ltd., a technology company whose ordinary shares trade on Nasdaq under the symbol CLBT. According to multiple company press releases and SEC filings, Cellebrite describes itself as a global leader in Digital Investigative and Intelligence solutions for the public and private sectors. The company focuses on AI-powered software that supports digital investigations, digital forensics and intelligence gathering for lawfully sanctioned use cases.
Cellebrite states that its mission is to enable global customers to protect and save lives by enhancing digital investigations and intelligence gathering to accelerate justice in communities around the world. Its AI-powered Digital Investigation Platform is described as enabling customers to lawfully access, collect, analyze and share digital evidence in legally sanctioned investigations while preserving data privacy. Thousands of public safety organizations, intelligence agencies and businesses are said to rely on Cellebrite’s digital forensic and investigative solutions, which the company notes are available via cloud, on-premises and hybrid deployments.
The company highlights that its technology is used in more than 1.5 million investigations globally each year and that more than 7,000 customers worldwide use its tools to support investigations. Examples cited in its communications include investigations of child exploitation, homicide, terrorism, border control, sex crimes, drugs and other organized crime, human trafficking, fraud, intellectual property theft, financial crimes, internal investigations and eDiscovery cases. Cellebrite emphasizes that its offerings are intended to help customers close cases faster, enhance sovereign security, elevate operational efficacy and efficiency, and safeguard data privacy while following applicable protocols and regulatory requirements.
Recent company announcements describe an AI-powered Case-to-Closure or Digital Investigation Platform that spans collection and review through advanced AI-powered analysis. Cellebrite has referenced solutions such as its flagship digital forensics software Inseyets, its Guardian suite for digital forensics, investigations and analytics, and its Pathfinder investigative data analytics offering. It also reports that its technology can be deployed in environments such as AWS GovCloud for certain government users and that it supports both cloud-based and offline operational needs for agencies with varying security and connectivity requirements.
Cellebrite has also reported strategic moves to expand its capabilities in areas like Arm-based mobile virtualization and device analysis. The company announced an agreement to acquire Corellium, described as a leader in Arm-based virtualization software, and later reported the completion of this acquisition. In its public statements, Cellebrite explains that Corellium technology brings Arm-based mobile virtualization offerings and differentiated iOS, Android and IoT device analysis capabilities used for security research and testing by defense, intelligence and other government agencies and enterprise customers. The company positions this combination as expanding its digital investigation portfolio and mobile security testing capabilities.
In addition, Cellebrite has discussed its Cellebrite Government Cloud (CGC), which it says is on a path toward FedRAMP High authorization with sponsorship from the U.S. Department of Justice. The company indicates that CGC will provide U.S. federal agencies secure access to digital investigative tools such as Inseyets and Guardian in a cloud environment, with the goal of delivering operational efficiencies, end-to-end collaboration and strengthened chain of custody for digital evidence.
Cellebrite also highlights partnerships and initiatives aimed at specific public safety challenges. For example, it has described an expanded relationship with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) in which NCMEC’s CyberTipline hash value list is integrated into Cellebrite Inseyets. According to the company and NCMEC, this integration is intended to allow public safety agencies to immediately pinpoint known child sexual abuse material files, speeding up time to evidence, supporting arrests and prosecutions, and reducing investigators’ exposure to harmful content.
As a foreign private issuer based in Israel, Cellebrite files reports with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Form 20-F and furnishes current reports on Form 6-K. Recent 6-K filings reference press releases on quarterly financial results, leadership changes, and shareholder meetings. These filings indicate that the company uses subscription-based software models and tracks metrics such as annual recurring revenue, dollar-based net retention rate, non-GAAP financial measures and free cash flow, though specific figures are time-bound and subject to change.
Because CLBTW represents warrants associated with Cellebrite DI Ltd., investors interested in CLBTW typically review Cellebrite’s business description, risk factors and financial disclosures as part of their analysis. Official details on the warrant terms, exercise conditions and duration are contained in Cellebrite’s SEC registration statements and related offering documents, which should be consulted directly for instrument-specific information.
Business focus and technology
Across its public communications, Cellebrite consistently characterizes its core focus as digital investigations, digital forensics and digital intelligence. The company states that its AI-powered software portfolio is designed to make forensically sound digital data more accessible and actionable. It references capabilities for accessing and collecting data from devices, analyzing multiple evidence types, and enabling collaborative review and sharing of digital evidence within investigative workflows.
Cellebrite also notes that its solutions are used by both public sector and private sector customers. Public safety organizations and intelligence agencies are described as using the technology in investigations of serious crimes and threats, while enterprises may use it for internal investigations, application security testing, mobile security research and other digital intelligence needs. The company’s communications emphasize lawful use, legally sanctioned investigations and adherence to data privacy and regulatory requirements.
Regulatory and governance context
As reflected in its SEC filings, Cellebrite holds annual general meetings of shareholders and circulates proxy statements describing proposals and voting procedures. The company has also reported leadership changes, including the appointment of a chief executive officer and chief financial officer, and the appointment of a general counsel and chief compliance officer to oversee legal and compliance matters, including appropriate use of the company’s technology. These governance disclosures are part of its ongoing reporting obligations as a Nasdaq-listed foreign private issuer.
Use of AI and cloud
Cellebrite’s recent announcements place particular emphasis on AI and cloud deployment. The company describes using AI, including agentic AI, within its Guardian Investigate solution to analyze evidence types such as mobile data, call detail records, open-source intelligence and case files, with workflows designed to support collaboration among investigative teams. It also highlights that its digital investigation and intelligence solutions are available via cloud, on-premises and hybrid deployments, and that it is advancing FedRAMP-related efforts for its government cloud offering to meet U.S. federal requirements.