AVDS is a network vulnerability assessment appliance for networks of 50 to 200,000 nodes. It performs an in-depth inspection for security weaknesses that can replace expensive penetration testing. With each scan it will automatically find new equipment and services and add them to the inspection schedule. It then tests every node based on its characteristics and reports its responses to reveal security issues in equipment, operating systems and applications.
You set the IP range to investigate and in a matter of hours and with no network down time or interruption of services AVDS will generate detailed reports specifying network security weaknesses.
Our database of tests is updated daily with the most recently discovered security vulnerabilities. The AVDS database includes over 10,000 known vulnerabilities and the updates include discoveries by our own team and those discovered by corporate and private security teams around the world.
WSSA examines your website pages, applications and web servers to find security weaknesses and vulnerabilities that would give hackers an opportunity to do damage. Simply give us your domain and an email address and you will get a complete report with the facts and recommendations you and your IT staff need to take corrective action.
We'll quickly identify website security issues and then test it routinely to keep it secure! Just provide your domain name and WSSA will do the rest. There is nothing to install and our tests will not disturb your site or visitors.
WSSA is driven by the same vulnerability assessment system we provide to governments and corporations; AVDS. Every scan starts by testing the equipment that hosts your site. No matter how carefully coded your pages are, if the host equipment is vulnerable, your site is at risk.
Then WSSA automatically tests your website pages for all of the known code vulnerabilities like:
beSTORM performs a comprehensive analysis, exposing security holes in your products during development and after release.
beSTORM represents a new approach to security auditing. This new approach is sometimes called "fuzzing", "fuzz testing" or "fuzzer" and can be used for securing in-house developed applications and devices, as well as applications and devices of external vendors.
Most of the security holes found today in products and applications, can be discovered automatically. By using an automated attack tool that tries virtually all different attack combinations, with the ability to detect certain application anomalies and indicate a successful attack, those security holes can be found almost without user intervention.