Pwns for sale: Scythe prepares a marketplace for sharing simulated hacks

Stock photo of a grocery store aisle.
Enlarge / Imagine a supermarket full of advanced persistent threats for your security team to throw at you. That’s what Scythe is aiming to be.

As we noted earlier this week, there’s been a lot of action in the information-security industry around automation of tasks that typically get labelled as either penetration testing or “red teaming.” The two are related but not quite the same—and there are obvious limits on how much can be passed off to an “as-a-service” type solution. But Ars has been looking at some of the early movers in security-testing tools for some time, and one is about to put a totally different spin on what “as-a-service” can do.

Penetration testing generally involves checking systems for vulnerabilities that can be exploited to gain access. Red teaming, on the other hand, tests the full spectrum of security by introducing human elements—social engineering with crafted phishing messages, exploiting information for further attacks, and the like. While they can benefit from automation, those are things that can’t be fully passed off to a bunch of software robots in the cloud.

Scythe, a software company that spun out of the security-testing company Grimm, has been working for the past few years on a platform that allows corporate information-security teams to build security-testing campaigns—creating “synthetic malware” and crafting phishing campaigns or other attacks that mimic the techniques, tactics, and practices of known threat groups. And unlike some of the automated penetration-testing or threat-simulation products out there, Scythe retains the human in the loop—making it a useful tool to both internal security testers and external “red team” consultants.

Ars has tested earlier versions of the Scythe platform (starting in 2017, when it was still known as Crossbow), wreaking havoc on a set of victim systems in our lab and doing hands-on-keyboard things that a red team would typically do to simulate an attack. The platform allowed for the construction of “malware” that would work only on systems within a specific network-address range tailored to the task and capable of downloading additional modules of functionality once installed. The faux malware is deployable as executable files or dynamic linking libraries, allowing the emulation of more advanced malware attacks. Since it is custom generated, its signature doesn’t match known malware; endpoint protection software has to catch its behaviors. (Windows 7’s Windows Defender did not catch on, but my limited malware crafting skills were caught by other endpoint systems in custom campaigns I built; the packaged modules did much better in crushing my intentionally limited defenses.)

The Scythe campaign console allows security testers to build a custom malware campaign against their organization.
Enlarge / The Scythe campaign console allows security testers to build a custom malware campaign against their organization.

Those capabilities were what drew several security professionals that spoke to Ars to Scythe early on, as they were looking for tools that went beyond “threat simulation” tools—systems which in many cases essentially broadcast packet captures of malicious traffic or agents installed on targeted systems (such as with AttackIQ and Cymulate) to verify security controls. But from early on, Scythe CEO Bryson Bort talked about his vision for turning the platform that would not only allow internal and external red teams to develop their own attacks to manage from Scythe’s platform, but it would share them or sell them to others on the platform.

At the RSA Conference this month in San Francisco, that marketplace will be officially launched. “Consultancies use us for the services they sell,” Bort told Ars. “The marketplace will allow them to build their own modules.” Those modules of capability can either be open source and shared freely across the platform, or the developers can resell their modules to customers or other consultancies.

The modular approach is something that’s familiar to people in the security testing and research world—particularly those who’ve used the Metasploit framework for Web and application security testing over the years (or used it for the FBI to unmask child-porn site visitors). The big difference in Scythe’s approach is that they’ll be essentially available in an “app store” within Scythe’s interface and ready to adapt to an organization’s specific needs.

According to one person Ars spoke with who uses the platform as part of an internal red team at a Fortune 500 corporation (who spoke on background because of the sensitivity of his work and employer), the marketplace will make Scythe even more valuable to red teams. And it should also make the tool more accessible and useful to a broader range of companies looking to raise the game on their vulnerability management.

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