NEW DELHI — The FutureCrime Summit 2026, scheduled for August 6 and 7 at Dr. Ambedkar International Centre in New Delhi, has added Resecurity and Binary Global as platinum partners, a move that reflects both the scale of the event and the widening commercial and institutional interest in India’s cybercrime and digital security ecosystem.
Organizers are positioning the summit as a major convening point for professionals working across cybersecurity, digital forensics, financial crime, cyber law, online safety, AI-enabled threats and technology-driven investigations. The official summit platform describes the event as a national forum focused on cyber security, cybercrime investigation, artificial intelligence threats, digital forensics and related security domains.
The 2026 edition follows earlier summits that, according to official and summit-linked materials, drew more than 1,800 delegates and security professionals, featured 120-plus speakers and cyber experts, and brought together government, industry and law enforcement participants on a single stage.
Why Resecurity and Binary Global Matter to This Lineup
The two platinum partners arrive from different but complementary corners of the security market.
Resecurity describes itself as a cybersecurity company focused on intelligence-driven solutions for enterprises, national security bodies and law enforcement agencies. The company’s offerings span cyber threat intelligence, risk management, digital risk monitoring, fraud and investigations, with a stated mission of helping organizations combat sophisticated cyber threats.
Binary Global, by contrast, presents itself as an enterprise technology and cybersecurity firm centered on scalable IT, cloud, infrastructure and cyber defense services. Its published materials emphasize managed IT operations, compliance and governance support, 24/7 managed security services, and enterprise-grade cyber defense and infrastructure resilience.
Taken together, the pairing is emblematic of the summit’s broader ambition: not only to discuss cybercrime and emerging digital threats, but to bring into the same room the firms, investigators, policymakers and security leaders expected to respond to them.
A Summit Built on Past Scale and High-Level Participation
That ambition is grounded in a track record the organizers have increasingly emphasized.
Future Crime Summit’s own materials say past editions have brought together government officials, industry leaders, investigators and cyber experts, while coverage linked to previous summits highlights speaker rosters that included figures such as Dr. V.K. Saraswat, Lt Gen M.U. Nair, Rajiv Jain, Dr. Gulshan Rai, Justice Talwant Singh, Dr. Sanjay Bahl, and Lt Gen (Retd.) Dr. Rajesh Pant, among others.
The summit’s thematic range has also expanded over time. Prior editions have foregrounded cyber forensics, ransomware, digital fraud, AI-enabled crime, deepfakes, dark web investigations, data protection, incident response, technology law and sectoral cyber resilience.
That breadth helps explain why sponsor categories matter. A summit built around tech-enabled crime no longer speaks only to police or only to private CISOs; it now addresses banks, regulators, corporate investigators, public-sector agencies, legal professionals, fraud teams and digital infrastructure firms alike.
Registrations, Exhibitions and a Wider Invitation to Industry
Organizers say registrations for the 2026 edition are expected to begin within this week, extending the event’s outreach to a fresh audience ahead of the August gathering.
The summit is also inviting broader corporate participation. Companies interested in exhibiting, showcasing products, or joining as sponsors have been asked to reach out by email at research@futurecrime.org.
That invitation is in keeping with how the event has been evolving: as both a conference and a marketplace of ideas, partnerships and security technologies. If past editions helped establish the summit as one of India’s most visible platforms on technology-enabled crime, the addition of platinum partners such as Resecurity and Binary Global suggests that the 2026 edition is being built not just as a forum for discussion, but as a larger ecosystem event.
In an environment where cybercrime, digital fraud and AI-driven threats increasingly cut across public and private domains, that ecosystem may matter as much as the speeches themselves.