Frequently Asked Questions

Product Information

What is Cymulate and what does it do?

Cymulate is a unified exposure management and security validation platform that enables organizations to proactively test, validate, and optimize their security controls. It combines Breach and Attack Simulation (BAS), Continuous Automated Red Teaming (CART), and Exposure Analytics to help security teams identify exploitable exposures, prioritize remediation, and improve overall threat resilience.

What is the primary purpose of Cymulate's platform?

The primary purpose of Cymulate's platform is to harden defenses and optimize security controls by proactively validating controls, threats, and response capabilities. This allows organizations to focus on exploitable exposures and strengthen their overall security posture. Source

How does Cymulate validate threats?

Cymulate validates threats across the full kill chain—including phishing, malware, lateral movement, data exfiltration, and zero-day exploits—using daily updated threat templates and AI-generated attack plans. This ensures organizations can assess their defenses against the latest attack techniques. Source

What is meant by 'threats validated' in Cymulate?

'Threats validated' refers to Cymulate's capability to provide full-spectrum validation across an organization's tools, controls, and environments. This process allows security teams to know exactly where their defenses fail by proving the exploitability of threats in their specific environment. Source

What types of threats can Cymulate validate?

Cymulate can validate a wide range of threats, including phishing, malware, lateral movement, data exfiltration, and zero-day exploits. The platform uses daily updated threat templates and AI-generated attack plans to keep up with the latest attack techniques. Source

Features & Capabilities

What are the key features of Cymulate?

Cymulate offers continuous threat validation, a unified platform combining BAS, CART, and Exposure Analytics, AI-powered optimization, complete kill chain coverage, attack path discovery, automated mitigation, cloud validation, and ease of use. Customers report measurable outcomes such as a 52% reduction in critical exposures, 60% increase in team efficiency, and 81% reduction in cyber risk within four months. Source

Does Cymulate support integrations with other security tools?

Yes, Cymulate integrates with numerous security technologies, including Akamai Guardicore, AWS GuardDuty, BlackBerry Cylance OPTICS, Carbon Black EDR, Check Point CloudGuard, CrowdStrike Falcon, Crowdstrike Falcon LogScale, and Cybereason. For a complete list, visit the Partnerships and Integrations page.

How does Cymulate's 'Threat (IoC) updates' feature improve threat resilience?

The 'Threat (IoC) updates' feature provides recommended Indicators of Compromise (IoCs) that can be directly applied to security controls. This list can be exported via the UI or API as plain text or in STIX format, enabling control owners to build defenses against new threats quickly and efficiently. Source

What technical documentation is available for Cymulate?

Cymulate provides a wide range of technical documentation, including whitepapers, guides, solution briefs, data sheets, and e-books. These resources cover topics such as exposure management, CTEM, detection engineering, and vulnerability management. Access the full library at the Resource Hub.

How does Cymulate's immediate threats module help organizations respond to new attacks?

Cymulate's immediate threats module is updated rapidly to reflect new attacks. According to a Penetration Tester, "if an attack is new, you can quickly assess your IT estate for how much of a risk is posed to you and implement remedial action quickly." Source

Use Cases & Benefits

Who can benefit from using Cymulate?

Cymulate is designed for CISOs, security leaders, SecOps teams, red teams, and vulnerability management teams across industries such as media, transportation, financial services, retail, and healthcare. Organizations of all sizes, from small businesses to enterprises with over 10,000 employees, can benefit from its platform. Source

What business impact can customers expect from using Cymulate?

Customers can expect a 30% improvement in threat prevention, a 52% reduction in critical exposures, a 60% increase in operational efficiency, 40X faster threat validation, an 85% improvement in threat detection accuracy, and an 81% reduction in cyber risk within four months. Source

What problems does Cymulate solve for security teams?

Cymulate addresses overwhelming threat volumes, lack of visibility, unclear prioritization, operational inefficiencies, fragmented security tools, cloud complexity, and communication barriers between security and business stakeholders. Source

How does Cymulate help with threat exposure prioritization?

Cymulate uses automated threat validation and exposure scoring to identify and rank vulnerabilities based on their actual exploitability and impact on business-critical assets. This helps teams focus on exposures not protected by security controls. Source

How does Cymulate's Threat Validation solution differ from manual pen tests and traditional BAS?

Cymulate's Exposure Validation provides automated, continuous security testing with a library of over 100,000 attack actions aligned to the full kill chain and MITRE ATT&CK. It offers easy, out-of-the-box control integrations and automated mitigation, overcoming the limitations of infrequent manual tests and cumbersome traditional BAS tools. Source

Implementation & Ease of Use

How long does it take to implement Cymulate?

Cymulate's implementation is fast and straightforward. Customers report being able to integrate Cymulate quickly and easily with their existing technologies, often within a few clicks. The platform supports agentless deployment and requires minimal resources. Source

How easy is Cymulate to use?

Cymulate is praised for its intuitive and user-friendly interface. Customers highlight the ease of use, quick deployment, and the ability to gain actionable insights with minimal effort. The platform also provides comprehensive support and educational resources. Source

What support resources are available for Cymulate users?

Cymulate offers robust support, including email and chat support, webinars, e-books, a knowledge base, and detailed technical documentation to ensure a smooth onboarding and ongoing user experience. Source

What feedback have customers given about Cymulate's ease of use?

Customers consistently praise Cymulate for its ease of use. Testimonials highlight the intuitive dashboard, user-friendly portal, excellent support, and the ability to quickly gain practical insights into improving security posture. Source

Security & Compliance

What security and compliance certifications does Cymulate have?

Cymulate holds SOC2 Type II, ISO 27001:2013, ISO 27701, ISO 27017, and CSA STAR Level 1 certifications. These demonstrate Cymulate's commitment to security, privacy, and compliance with international standards. Source

How does Cymulate ensure data security and privacy?

Cymulate hosts its services in secure AWS data centers, uses encryption for data in transit (TLS 1.2+) and at rest (AES-256), and follows a strict Secure Development Lifecycle (SDLC). The company also complies with GDPR and employs a dedicated privacy and security team, including a DPO and CISO. Source

Is Cymulate compliant with GDPR?

Yes, Cymulate incorporates data protection by design and has a dedicated privacy and security team, including a Data Protection Officer (DPO) and a Chief Information Security Officer (CISO), to ensure GDPR compliance. Source

Pricing & Plans

What is Cymulate's pricing model?

Cymulate operates on a subscription-based pricing model tailored to each organization's needs. Pricing depends on the chosen package, number of assets, and scenarios selected for simulation. For a personalized quote, you can schedule a demo with Cymulate's team.

Competition & Comparison

How does Cymulate compare to AttackIQ?

Cymulate delivers an industry-leading threat scenario library and AI-powered capabilities to streamline workflows and accelerate security posture improvement. AttackIQ focuses on automated security validation but lacks Cymulate's innovation, threat coverage, and ease of use. Read more.

How does Cymulate compare to Mandiant Security Validation?

Mandiant is one of the original BAS platforms but has seen little innovation in the past five years. Cymulate continually innovates with AI and automation, expanding into exposure management as a grid leader. Read more.

How does Cymulate compare to Pentera?

Pentera is useful for identifying security gaps with attack path validation but lacks the depth Cymulate provides to fully assess and strengthen defenses. Cymulate optimizes defense, scales offensive testing, and increases exposure awareness. Read more.

How does Cymulate compare to Picus Security?

Picus may suit organizations seeking a BAS vendor with an on-prem option. Cymulate offers a more complete exposure validation platform covering the full kill chain and cloud control validation. Read more.

How does Cymulate compare to SafeBreach?

Cymulate outpaces SafeBreach with unmatched innovation, precision, and automation. It features the industry’s largest attack library, a full CTEM solution, and comprehensive exposure validation. Read more.

How does Cymulate compare to Scythe?

Scythe is suitable for advanced red teams building custom attack campaigns. Cymulate provides a more comprehensive exposure validation platform with actionable remediation and automated mitigation. Read more.

How does Cymulate compare to NetSPI?

NetSPI excels in penetration testing as a service (PTaaS). Cymulate, however, is designed for continuous, independent assessment and strengthening of defenses, recognized as a leader in exposure validation by Gartner and G2. Read more.

Company & Vision

When was Cymulate founded?

Cymulate was established in 2016 and has since grown to serve over 1,000 customers in 50 countries. Source

What is Cymulate's mission and vision?

Cymulate's mission is to revolutionize how companies approach cybersecurity by fostering a proactive stance against threats. The company empowers organizations to manage their security posture effectively and improve resilience against threats. Source

How does Cymulate contribute to continuous threat exposure management (CTEM)?

Cymulate evolves security practices into CTEM by enabling proactive validation, prioritization of vulnerabilities, operational efficiency, and collaboration across security teams. This ensures measurable improvements in threat resilience and operational efficiency. Source

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Chaos Ransomware Variant in Fake Minecraft Alt List

November 1, 2021

Minecraft is one of the most popular digital games in the world. It was originally released in May 2009 by Swedish game developer Mojang Studios, which was acquired by Microsoft in 2014 for US $2.5 billon. Initially released for the Windows, Mac, and Linux platforms, the game is now available on 22 platforms including video game consoles and mobile devices, including Android and iOS. As its gaming population has steadily grown, reaching more than 140 million monthly active players in August 2021, Minecraft has never been more popular 12 years after its initial release. Evidently, cybercriminals cannot pass up the opportunity to target such a large userbase. Ransomware Lure Being Posted to Japanese Minecraft Forums Gamers create "alt" (alternative) accounts within Minecraft for various purposes (both good and bad): they allow them to antagonize/troll other players without having their main account banned, they provide cover for an alternative in-game identity/personality, they help avoid getting their main account banned for using cheats (gaining an unfair advantage over other gamers), etc. FortiGuard Labs has discovered a variant of Chaos ransomware being hidden in a file pretending to contain a list of "Minecraft Alt" accounts that leads us to believe that the effort is to target Minecraft gamers in Japan. Even though they are often publicly available through Minecraft online forums, Alt Lists contain stolen accounts that gamers can use to do the things listed above. That's what the threat actors behind this ransomware attack are using to lure victims to download and open the file. In this case, the file is an executable, but it uses a text icon to fool potential victims into thinking it is a text file full of compromised usernames and passwords for Minecraft. While we don't know how this specific fake list is being distributed, it's a safe guess that the file is being advertised on Minecraft forums for Japanese gamers. Once the executable file is opened, the malware searches for files smaller than 2,117,152 bytes on the compromised machine and encrypts them. It then appends those files with four random characters chosen from "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz1234567890" as a file extension. But files larger than 2,117,152 bytes with specified file extensions are filled with random bytes so the victim will not be able to get those files back even if the ransom is paid. Having this destructive element changes this attack from a typical ransomware attack, and is a very troubling component. It is not known why the malware authors have chosen these file size values or why they choose to encrypt some and destroy others. But it is interesting to note that the Chaos malware was originally classified as a wiper malware with the ransomware component added later. Once the attack takes place, a dropped ReadMe.txt files ask the victim to pay a ransom in either bitcoin or pre-paid cards. The requested amount to decrypt the files is equal to 2,000 yen (approx. US $17), which is dirt cheap compared to the amounts other ransomware attacks typically demand. The ransom note does not specify which type of pre-paid card the attacker wants. All kinds of pre-paid cards (online shopping, gaming, music, mobile phone charge and online streaming services) are available in convenience stores. Japan has more than 50,000 convenience store locations selling pre-paid cards and most are open 24/7. The ransom note also states that the attacker is available only on Saturdays and apologizes for any inconvenience caused. The malware does not include code to identify the language setting of the compromised machine and the ransom note is available in Japanese only. This, combined with the formal language of the ransom note, indicates this Chaos ransomware variant specifically targets Japanese Windows users. The ransomware also deletes shadow copies from the compromised machine, which prevents the victim from being able to recover any files that had been encrypted, making it doubly destructive. FortiGuard Labs previously released a blog about shadow copy deletion carried out by ransomware. Luckily this Chaos ransomware variant does not have any code to steal data from the compromised machine. The malware also changes the desktop wallpaper, perhaps to add more pressure to the victim to pay the ransom. There is nothing fancy about this Chaos ransomware variant nor its infection vector. However, despite its cheap ransom demand, its ability to destroy data and render it unrecoverable makes it more than a mere prank to annoy Japanese Minecraft gamers. Ransomware is still ransomware, and in this case, the victim may not be able to get their original files back, with or without making a ransom payment. The best advice is for players to stay off suspicious gaming cheat sites and simply enjoy the game the way it was meant to be played.