Civic milestones & updates: Q4 2025

Civic Q4 2025 highlights growth after the Nexus launch, with new MCP servers, stronger security milestones, and deeper community engagement.

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Civic Milestones & Updates: Q4 2025

Our fourth quarter was about building on our momentum, after launching Civic Nexus, our AI-powered workflow tool, in September.

Overall, our focus shifted from introduction to growth. The quarter centered on expanding how Civic Nexus works in real environments, reinforcing trust as adoption grows, and continuing to show up alongside other leaders in the space.

Across product development, security, and community engagement, Q4 reflected steady progress toward the same goal: Making AI-driven work more reliable, more structured, and better aligned with how teams actually operate.

Enhancing Civic Nexus

Civic Nexus marked a shift in how we approach AI-driven work, not as another layer of tooling, but as infrastructure that brings structure and accountability to how AI operates across systems. As the quarter unfolded, the focus moved from launch to validation, expanding how teams use Civic Nexus to coordinate real work across marketing, support, operations, and data.

That momentum continued in November with the release of the Google Workspace MCP server. By connecting Gmail, Docs, Sheets, Calendar, and Drive directly into Civic Nexus, we brought AI workflows into the tools where work already happens. This made it easier for teams to automate without changing how they operate day to day, grounding AI-driven processes in familiar systems rather than forcing new ones.

Behind the scenes, the fourth quarter was also about expanding the foundation. Over the course of the quarter, we added 36 new MCP servers, broadening the range of systems Civic Nexus can safely and reliably orchestrate. Each server is designed to give AI clear boundaries and known parameters, reinforcing the idea that scale comes from structure rather than from exposing more tools without constraints.

As that foundation took shape, we began showing what it enables. Our Support, Growth, and Data stacks illustrate how multiple MCP servers come together around real outcomes, turning integrations into coordinated workflows teams can trust. Together, these releases reflect how Q4 built on the Civic Nexus launch, moving from potential to practical impact.

Security and trust

As Civic Nexus gained traction, strengthening our security posture became a parallel priority. At the close of Q3, we achieved SOC 2 Type 1 compliance, validating the design of our controls around security, availability, and confidentiality at a moment when teams were beginning to rely on Nexus for real operational work. In Q4, that foundation deepened with the achievement of Google CASA Tier 2, clearing a critical bar for accessing sensitive Google Workspace scopes and reinforcing our commitment to building AI infrastructure that meets enterprise trust expectations from day one. Together, these milestones reflect how trust advanced alongside momentum as Civic Nexus moved into broader use.

Community and ecosystem development

As Civic Nexus moved from launch into real world use, we showed up in Q4 where builders, operators, and teams are already learning and experimenting. We supported and participated in hackathons including Antler Global and ETH Rome, engaging directly with developers exploring agentic AI in practical settings. At Antler Global, teams like Little Copilot, Go Outfit AI, and Hyperyield stood out for how they approached automation, decision making, and applied AI workflows. These environments remain an important proving ground, where ideas move quickly from concept to implementation and where we see firsthand how teams think about workflow, trust, and automation in the wild.

That same focus on practical learning carried through our broader programming. Civic appeared on an AI for MarTech podcast and offered 2026 predictions in the news. We hosted three AI for the Workplace workshops: Leave behind busy work in 2025, Create your own AI powered writing, and Practical AI applications and techniques. These are all designed to help teams move beyond experimentation and into everyday use. On stage, our own developer relations leader, Ty Avnit, spoke at AI Camp, while our VP of Go to Market, Titus Capilnean, shared insights in Bucharest

We launched Season 2 of our Agents of Context podcast, which created space for deeper conversations on where AI infrastructure is headed. Across four episodes, we explored open agent ecosystems with Shaw Walters, the founder of ElizaOS, the emerging AI security arms race with Mitchell Amador, founder of Immunefi, the role of wallets in agent-based systems with Naga Samineni from Metakeep, and what it takes to secure AI agents with Neil Daswani, a renowned cybersecurity expert, educator, and entrepreneur.

Throughout the quarter, we stayed active across key industry events including Lisbon AI Week, Superteam BLKN, ETH Rome, OpsStars, and How to Web. Each touchpoint gave us the opportunity to listen closely, share what we are building, and stay grounded in the realities teams face as they move AI into production.

Looking ahead

As we move into 2026, the work AI agents can take on will continue to expand, moving beyond isolated tasks into more complex, cross system workflows. That shift will place new demands on how companies structure automation, manage risk, and maintain trust as AI becomes more embedded in daily operations.

Civic Nexus is being built for that next phase. We are focused on supporting broader classes of work while continuing to strengthen the guardrails that keep companies, systems, and data safe. The progress made this quarter lays the groundwork for what comes next, helping teams adopt AI with confidence as both the opportunity and responsibility grow.