“Remarkable high-fidelity data granularity.”
Cavalier™ is based on forensic technologies and operational knowhow developed at the IDF’s 8200 Unit to counter nation-state adversaries and professional threat-actors. It is a unique cybercrime intelligence data source composed of millions of machines compromised in global malware spreading campaigns.
Our high-fidelity data is sourced directly from threat actors and augmented monthly with hundreds of thousands of new compromised machines. Cavalier’s™ high-fidelity data protects employees, partners, customers, and digital assets with unprecedented granularity of threat vectors including Ransomware, Business Espionage, Breaches & Network Overtakes.
Comprehensive protection to your brand from cybercrime threats and compromised credentials.
Learn how Cavalier’s threat intelligence data can enrich your security operations and investigations.
Allows hackers to use existing sessions of victims by importing their cookies and bypass 2fa and other security measurements.
The IP address of the compromised computer.
The date in which the computer was infected.
The username of the computer that was infected assists in identifying which computer was infected as sometimes employees share credentials, complicating attribution.
Comprehensive analysis of victim’s browsing patterns, visited websites, and online behavior that may have led to the compromise or reveals sensitive information.
URL accessed by the victim, their login credentials and plaintext passwords, are used by hackers to hack into employee and user accounts. The credentials are retrieved directly from the browsers of the victims and are therefore almost always valid.
Which operating system was installed on the infected computer.
The path on the computer in which the infostealer malware was installed on.
A list of the anti-viruses running on the computer at the time of the infection.
Detailed forensic analysis identifying the root cause of infection, including entry points, vulnerable applications, and attack chain reconstruction.
Sensitive files that were stolen from the computer at the time of the infection, including documents, credentials, and other critical data.