As Key Partners Join, FutureCrime Summit 2026 Expands Sponsorship and Exhibition Access

FutureCrime Summit 2026 Invites Sponsors and Exhibitors to Join India’s Largest Cybercrime Conference

The420 Web Desk
6 Min Read

As FutureCrime Summit 2026 moves from announcement to execution, organizers are widening the conversation beyond delegates and speakers to the companies that want to be visibly associated with the country’s growing cyber and investigative ecosystem. Sponsorships and exhibitor opportunities are now open for the summit, which will be held on August 6 and 7, 2026, at the Dr. Ambedkar International Centre in New Delhi.

That invitation is not being made in a vacuum. The summit has already secured a first cluster of marquee partners. ReSecurity and Binary Global have joined as Platinum Partners, while mh Service has come on board as a Gold Partner. The sequence matters because it signals how the event is being positioned: not only as a conference on cybercrime and security policy, but as a marketplace of technology, influence and institutional access.

The official summit site presents FutureCrime Summit 2026 as a national platform on cyber security, cybercrime investigation, artificial intelligence threats, digital forensics, cyber law and national cyber resilience. In practice, that makes it attractive not just to public institutions and practitioners, but to the private firms building the tools that increasingly shape how digital crime is investigated and defended against. Organizers say companies interested in sponsorships, exhibitions or showcasing products and services at FutureCrime Summit 2026 can write to research@futurecrime.org.

Registration Begins for FutureCrime Summit 2026, India’s Largest Cybercrime Conference

The Early Partners Show the Event’s Direction

The identities of the first confirmed partners offer a useful indication of the kind of summit Future Crime is trying to become.

ReSecurity is a cybersecurity company offering endpoint protection, risk management and cyber threat intelligence solutions, with products spanning digital risk monitoring, external attack surface management and intelligence services. Binary Global is a provider of cybersecurity, cloud and IT services, securing enterprises with scalable infrastructure and digital transformation solutions. mh Service, meanwhile, is a digital forensics company focused on forensic hardware, DFIR platforms and investigation-led technologies.

That mix is revealing. It places threat intelligence, enterprise cyber defense, cloud and infrastructure security, and digital forensics in the same commercial and policy space. This is broadly consistent with the summit’s own subject matter, which stretches across cybercrime investigation, financial fraud, artificial intelligence in security, cyber law and digital forensics.

For sponsors and exhibitors, then, the value proposition is not only branding. It is adjacency to the issues that now define the security conversation in India: cyber-enabled fraud, investigative technology, legal and regulatory response, AI-linked threats, and the growing overlap between public-sector enforcement and private-sector capability.

Why the Summit Has Become a Useful Place to Be Seen

The reason sponsorships may carry unusual weight at this event lies in the audience it has already shown it can attract. Organizers say previous editions drew more than 1,800 delegates and security professionals and featured 120-plus global speakers and cyber experts. Coverage of earlier editions describes participation from law enforcement agencies, defense personnel, cybersecurity professionals, DFIR specialists, cyber lawyers, policymakers and corporate leaders.

That cross-sector blend is part of what differentiates the summit from a narrower industry event. It is not aimed solely at vendors selling to corporates, or solely at officials discussing policy. It sits in the overlap: the place where policing, defense, digital forensics, technology policy, fraud prevention and private-sector cyber infrastructure increasingly meet.

There is also a media and community dimension to that visibility. The420.in has been used as a recurring platform for summit coverage and partner announcements, it is a leading bilingual cybercrime news platform with over 1 million monthly readers. The same FCRF ecosystem also includes FCRF Academy, which offers certifications and training in cybersecurity, cyber forensics, law and digital governance for law enforcement, government bodies, corporates and students.

The academy is described as the organization’s training and capacity-building division, flagship programs such as CCMP have trained thousands of participants and that the academy was launched to institutionalize capacity building. FCRF Academy’s homepage also presents itself as a platform for professional education across cybersecurity, cyber law, fraud investigation, GRC and digital forensics.

Registration Begins for FutureCrime Summit 2026, India’s Largest Cybercrime Conference

Sponsorship as Access to an Ecosystem

That is ultimately what the sponsorship pitch seems to rest on: access not just to a two-day event, but to a broader institutional network.

The summit site and related coverage frame Future Crime Summit as part of a larger ecosystem that includes policy discussion, professional education, public-interest journalism and a national conversation about tech-enabled crime. For a sponsor or exhibitor, that means exposure not only to an audience in the room, but to the adjoining networks around FCRF, FCRF Academy and The420.in.

Organizers say companies interested in sponsorships, exhibitions or showcasing products and services at FutureCrime Summit 2026 can write to research@futurecrime.org. In practical terms, the invitation is aimed at organizations operating in cybersecurity, digital forensics, compliance, OSINT, AI, investigative technology, fraud risk and related domains that want to be seen by a concentrated audience of decision-makers and practitioners. As cybercrime becomes harder to separate from national security, fraud control, digital regulation and enterprise resilience, conferences like this increasingly function as both stage and signal.

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