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SoftBank launches AI-powered patching service with OpenAI

Manaal Khan17 June 2026 at 6:07 am4 min read
SoftBank launches AI-powered patching service with OpenAI

Key Takeaways

SoftBank launches AI-powered patching service with OpenAI
Source: Tech-Economic Times
  • SoftBank launches 'Patching as a Service' through its joint venture with OpenAI, targeting 3,000 Japanese critical infrastructure companies
  • The product team will scale from 50 to 1,000 people as rollout expands
  • SoftBank's cumulative committed investment in OpenAI reaches $64.6 billion by end of 2026

SoftBank Group launched a cybersecurity product on Tuesday that uses OpenAI's AI models to detect vulnerabilities and automate defenses for Japanese businesses. The 'Patching as a Service' offering rolls out through SB OAI Japan GK, the 50-50 joint venture SoftBank Corp and OpenAI established last November.

The launch targets 3,000 critical infrastructure companies in Japan during its initial phase. Internal testing identified over 10,000 vulnerabilities, according to SoftBank's presentation to enterprise clients in Tokyo.

Why is SoftBank building AI-powered cyber defense now?

The timing reflects growing anxiety about AI-enabled attacks on critical systems. Last week, the U.S. government suspended foreign nationals' access to Anthropic's Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models over national security concerns. That action signaled how seriously governments now treat AI capabilities as potential weapons.

Son framed the product as a defensive countermeasure. 'We want to create a system where we will be able to defend critical Japanese infrastructure,' he said. 'We want to leverage the new weapon of OpenAI to defend, we see this as our obligation.'

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman emphasized the asymmetry the product aims to correct: 'Our goal is to give defenders the same intelligence and scale that attackers are already using to breach systems.'

How the patching service works

The system scans infrastructure for security vulnerabilities, generates remediation plans, and automates defensive measures. OpenAI's specialized cyber models power the detection and planning layers. The service addresses a core problem in enterprise security: patching cycles that lag weeks or months behind vulnerability disclosures.

Discussion in technical communities has focused on the 'human-in-the-loop' requirement. While AI-driven vulnerability detection represents a significant capability jump, final deployment of patches to critical infrastructure like power grids still requires human engineers. That caution is warranted. Automated patching on a water treatment plant carries different risks than pushing a software update to a web application.

50 → 1,000
SoftBank Corp CEO Junichi Miyakawa said the team working on the product rollout will expand from 50 to approximately 1,000 people

SoftBank's $64.6 billion OpenAI bet

SoftBank Group is one of OpenAI's largest backers. Its cumulative committed investment will reach $64.6 billion by the end of 2026. That figure dwarfs most corporate AI bets and explains why SoftBank is building products on OpenAI's models rather than licensing alternatives.

The cybersecurity product deepens an existing relationship. SB OAI Japan GK has been developing AI system integration services for Japanese enterprises since its formation. Patching as a Service is the most concrete commercial offering to emerge from that work.

Also Read
Anthropic pauses Claude SDK billing overhaul amid OpenAI price war

Context on the competitive landscape between OpenAI and Anthropic in AI services

What this means for enterprise security teams

Japan's critical infrastructure operators now have a vendor-backed option for AI-assisted vulnerability management. The question is whether the model translates beyond Japan. SoftBank's domestic telecoms arm operates the joint venture, suggesting the initial focus stays local.

For security teams elsewhere, the launch signals that major tech investors see AI-powered patching as a viable product category. Microsoft, Google, and CrowdStrike have all moved toward AI-assisted security tools. SoftBank's entry, backed by OpenAI's models, raises the stakes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is SoftBank's Patching as a Service?

A cybersecurity product that uses OpenAI models to scan infrastructure for vulnerabilities, generate remediation plans, and automate defensive measures. It launched in Japan through SB OAI Japan GK, a joint venture between SoftBank Corp and OpenAI.

How much has SoftBank invested in OpenAI?

SoftBank's cumulative committed investment in OpenAI will reach $64.6 billion by the end of 2026, making it one of OpenAI's largest backers.

Who owns SB OAI Japan GK?

The joint venture is owned 50-50 by SoftBank Corp (SoftBank Group's domestic telecoms arm) and OpenAI. It was established in November 2025.

Is the AI patching fully automated?

No. While AI handles vulnerability detection and remediation planning, critical infrastructure deployments still require human engineers for final patch deployment, maintaining a human-in-the-loop safeguard.

Which companies will use the service first?

SoftBank is targeting 3,000 Japanese critical infrastructure companies in the initial rollout phase.

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Logicity's Take

SoftBank is testing whether its massive OpenAI investment can generate enterprise revenue beyond chatbots and coding assistants. Cybersecurity is a smart choice: high margins, recurring revenue, and a clear pain point that AI can address. The real test comes when competitors offer similar capabilities without requiring a SoftBank relationship. OpenAI exclusivity only matters until it doesn't.

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Need Help Implementing This?

If your organization is evaluating AI-powered security tools or building an AI integration strategy, Logicity's consulting partners can help. Contact us for vendor-neutral guidance on enterprise AI deployment.

Source: Tech-Economic Times / ET

M

Manaal Khan

Tech & Innovation Writer

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