Dave Mosley era (2017–present)
On July 25, 2017, David "Dave" Mosley was appointed CEO, effective from October 1, 2017 after longtime CEO, Steve Luczo stepped down and became executive chairman.[64][65]
In June 2018, Seagate was honored at the 14th Annual Manufacturing Leadership Awards Gala in Huntington Beach, California.[66] In 2018, Seagate invested in Series A and B of Ripple, an enterprise blockchain company.[67]
In 2019, Seagate invested £47 million in a research and development project at its factory in Derry, Northern Ireland.[68]
In 2020, Seagate announced that it was moving its headquarters and most of its staff from Cupertino to Fremont, California.[69] From May to June that year, the company laid off 500 employees across 12 countries due to a push for better operational efficiencies. Seagate planned for the rearrangement of more resources, including combining facilities in Minnesota.[70]
In September 2020, Seagate announced it had entered the object storage business and introduced CORTX, an open-source object storage software, Lyve Rack, a reference architecture based on CORTX, and a corresponding developer community. The community is a group of open-source researchers and developers working to advance mass-capacity object storage.[71][72] CORTX open-source software is hosted for download and collaboration on GitHub.[73]
As of May 18, 2021, the new Irish public limited company Seagate Technology Holdings plc became the publicly traded parent company of Seagate, replacing "Seagate Technology plc."[74]
In November 2021, at the Open Compute Summit, Seagate demonstrated the industry's first HDD with a non-volatile memory express (NVMe) interface.[75] This was unusual because HDDs operate far below the capabilities of the NVMe interface, which is usually associated with faster storage media like SSDs.
In May 2022, Seagate presented and demonstrated its LiDAR system at the Autosens conference in Detroit.[76] In February 2023, it divested its LiDAR division to Luminar Technologies.[77]
In October 2022, Seagate announced a restructuring plan to reduce headcount by 8%, equivalent to approximately 3,000 jobs.[78][79]
On January 17, 2024, Seagate announced the release of the first 30 TB HDD with the Exos Mozaic 3+ HDD series.[80][81] The series utilizes Heat-Assisted Magnetic Recording (HAMR) and Shingled Magnetic Recording (SMR) technology with an areal density of 3 TB per platter. The 30 TB Mozaic 3+ drive uses ten platters, only one more than the 16 TB Exos X16. Seagate plans to ramp capacity of its HAMR drives, eventually reaching an areal density of 5 TB per platter by 2028.[82] Seagate claims the new drives will have a cheaper cost per TB compared to existing drive models. The series was initially only available to enterprise markets, but is available to end users as of mid of July 2025.[83][81]
In February 2025, Seagate announced it would acquire HDD equipment maker Intevac for $119 million in an all-cash deal.[84]
In March 2026, Mozaic 4+ HAMR platform, 44TB (4.4TB per disc), Gen 2 superlattice platinum-alloy media, Gen 2 plasmonic writer, Gen 8 spintronic reader, 7nm integrated controller, hyperscale production environments.[85]