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February 27, 2025

Fighting the Real Enemy: The Importance of Responsible Vulnerability Disclosure Between Email Security Vendors

This blog explores an exploitation capability observed by Darktrace in another email security vendor’s link rewriting and the steps Darktrace took to inform and resolve the issue.
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Darktrace cyber analysts are world-class experts in threat intelligence, threat hunting and incident response, and provide 24/7 SOC support to thousands of Darktrace customers around the globe. Inside the SOC is exclusively authored by these experts, providing analysis of cyber incidents and threat trends, based on real-world experience in the field.
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27
Feb 2025

Part of being a cybersecurity vendor is recognizing our responsibility to the security community – while vendor competition exists, it pales in comparison to the threat of our shared adversary: malicious threat actors.

Darktrace is proud to be contributing to the shared mission of fighting attackers; without goodwill among defenders that task is made more difficult for everyone. Through collaboration, we can advance security standards across the board and make the world a safer place.  

With that in mind, Darktrace recently observed an exploitation capability latent in a competing email security vendor’s link rewriting infrastructure, which posed a risk to organizations. Following identification, Darktrace was able to report it to the vendor following their disclosure process. We’ll explore the vulnerability, the potential impact it may have had, how it could have been resolved, and the steps Darktrace took to raise it with the vendor.  

Please note that the following vulnerability we’re about to expose has already been resolved, so there is no risk of it being exploited by others. While keeping this vendor anonymous, we also want to thank them for their cordial response and swift remediation of the issue.

For more information about vulnerability disclosure best practices, refer to the UK National Cyber Security Center’s Vulnerability Disclosure Toolkit.

Details of the vulnerability

Let’s take a look at the weakness Darktrace identified in the link rewriting infrastructure.

In January 2025, Darktrace observed that links generated by a URL rewriting infrastructure could be re-engineered by a malicious actor to point to a URL of their choosing. In this way, a threat actor could effectively use the vendor’s domain to create a malicious domain under their control.

Because a majority of security vendors default to trust from known-safe domains, using one of these links as the payload greatly enhances the likelihood of that email being allow-listed to bypass email security, network URL filtering, and other such security tools, to reach the inbox. This issue meant any adversary could have abused the vendor’s safelink structure to deliver a malicious phishing link payload to any organization. It is likely this exploitation capability could have been found and abused at scale if not addressed.

The problem with said vendor’s link rewriting process was in using standard base-64 encoding instead of randomized encoding, so that anyone could replace the value of the parameter “b=” which contains a base64-encoded form of the original link with a base64-encoded form of a URL of their choosing.

This also posed issues from a privacy perspective. If, for example the encoded link was a SharePoint file, all the included folder names would be available for anyone to see in plaintext.

Example of a phishing attack caught by Darktrace that uses another email security solution’s compromised safelink
Fig 1: Example of a phishing attack caught by Darktrace that uses another email security solution’s compromised safelink

How the vulnerability was resolved

The solution for developers is to ensure the use of randomized encoding when developing link rewriting infrastructure to close the possibility of safelinks being deciphered and re-engineered by malicious actors.

Once Darktrace found this link issue we followed the vendor’s disclosure process to report the potential risk to customers and the wider community, while also conducting a review to ensure that Darktrace customers and their supply chains remained safe. We continued to follow up with the company directly to ensure that the vulnerability was fixed.

This instance highlights the importance of vendors having clear and visible vulnerability disclosure processes (such as RFC9116) and being available to listen to the security community in case of disclosures of this nature.

Why Darktrace was obliged to disclose this vulnerability

Here, Darktrace had two responsibilities: to the security community and to our customers.

As a company whose mission is to protect organizations today and for an ever-changing future, we will never stand by if there is a known risk. If attackers had used the safelinks to create new attacks, any organization could have been exposed due to the inherent trust in this vendor’s links within services that distribute or maintain global whitelists, harm which could have been multiplied by the interlinked nature of supply chains.

This means that not only the vendor’s customers were exposed, but any organization with their safelink in a whitelist was also exposed to this vulnerability. For Darktrace customers, an attack using this link would have been detected and stopped across various service offerings, and a secondary escalation by our Cyber AI Analyst would ensure security teams were aware. Even so, Darktrace has a responsibility to these customers to do everything in its power to minimize their exposure to risk, even if it comes from within their own security stack.

Why Darktrace customers remain protected

If a Darktrace / EMAIL, Darktrace / NETWORK, or any other Darktrace ActiveAI Security Platform customer was exposed to this type of vulnerability, our unique Self-Learning AI approach and defense-in-depth philosophy means they stay protected.

Darktrace / EMAIL doesn’t approach links from a binary perspective – as safe, or unsafe – instead every link is analyzed for hundreds of metrics including the content and context in which it was delivered. Because every user’s normal behavior is baselined, Darktrace can immediately detect anomalies in link-sharing patterns that may point to a threat. Furthermore, our advanced link analysis includes metrics on how links perform within a browser and in-depth visual analysis, to detect even well-disguised payloads.

None of Darktrace’s customers were compromised as a result of this vulnerability. But should a customer have clicked on a similar malicious link, that’s where a platform approach to security comes in. Detecting threats that traverse domains is one strength of the Darktrace ActiveAI Security Platform. Our AI correlates data from across the digital estate to spot suspicious activity in the network, endpoint or cloud that may have originated from a malicious email. Darktrace’s Cyber AI Analyst then performs triage and investigation of alerts to raise those of high importance to an incident, allowing for human-analyst validation and escalation.

As demonstrated by finding this vulnerability in another vendor, Darktrace’s R&D teams are always thinking like an attacker as they develop our products, to allow us to remain one step ahead for our customers.

Conclusion

We hope this example can be useful to developers working on link rewriting infrastructure, or to vendors figuring out how to proceed with a disclosure to another vendor. We’re pleased to have been able to collaborate with said vendor in this instance, and hope that it serves to illustrate the importance of defenders working together towards the common goal of keeping organizations safe from hostile cyber actors.

Inside the SOC
Darktrace cyber analysts are world-class experts in threat intelligence, threat hunting and incident response, and provide 24/7 SOC support to thousands of Darktrace customers around the globe. Inside the SOC is exclusively authored by these experts, providing analysis of cyber incidents and threat trends, based on real-world experience in the field.
Written by
The Darktrace Community

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June 2, 2026

Stopping Stealth Attacks with Precision: How Núclea Prevented a Breach Without Disruption

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Núclea is a Brazilian data and technology company that supports the country’s financial system by delivering digital services exclusively to banks and financial institutions. Operating in an environment where trust, availability, and data integrity are critical, the company faces a threat landscape that has evolved rapidly—particularly with the rise of AI-driven cyberattacks.

Brazil has experienced a wave of successful cyber incidents targeting financial institutions, many of them enabled by insiders or compromised credentials. The result was a noticeable shift in attacker strategy: instead of focusing on end customers, threat actors began targeting the institutions and platforms that underpin the financial ecosystem itself.

“Attacks became far more directed and contextual,” explains Guilherme, who leads incident response within Núclea’s security platform engineering team. “They weren’t noisy or obviously malicious—they were precise, patient, and designed to blend into normal operations.”

That precision was on full display in January 2026, when Núclea faced one of the most convincing phishing attacks the team had seen.

A real attack, built on trust and context

The attack began with a seemingly routine email.

It was sent from a real Brazilian government institution, using legitimate infrastructure and valid credentials that were later confirmed to have been compromised. Núclea had an established, ongoing relationship with this organization, and the email’s language, tone, and subject matter aligned perfectly with the type of communication the recipient team handled every day.

Attached to the email was a PDF document containing content that looked entirely legitimate.

The problem? A single URL embedded inside that PDF.

“The message itself was correct. The sender was real. The context was familiar. Even the document content made sense,” Guilherme explains. “There was just one small element that didn’t belong.”

That small detail was enough to initiate a full attack chain.

What the attackers were trying to do

If clicked, the URL would have downloaded a malicious payload designed to:

  • Collect information about the user and device
  • Identify where the system was located within the financial ecosystem
  • Install remote access tools to maintain control
  • Deploy an infostealer to extract sensitive data
  • Execute anti-forensic scripts to erase traces of the intrusion

In other words, it was a carefully engineered operation designed for persistence and stealth, not immediate disruption.

The attack also employed urgency—a classic social engineering technique. When the link didn’t open as expected, employees requested assistance from the security team, insisting the document was important and needed to be accessed quickly.

This is precisely the kind of scenario where traditional security tools struggle: almost everything about the interaction is legitimate.

Where Darktrace made the difference

Instead of blocking the entire message or relying on known indicators of compromise, Darktrace focused on behavioral context.

Darktrace recognized:

  • That the sending organization was normally trusted
  • That the communication pattern matched historical behavior
  • That the PDF content itself was not suspicious

But it also identified that the URL embedded within the document deviated from established behavioral patterns.

Rather than disrupting business operations, Darktrace took precise action: it rewrote the URL, preventing the malicious download while leaving the rest of the email untouched.

“When we analyzed it afterward, it became clear how dangerous the attack would have been,” says Guilherme. “But it never progressed—because Darktrace acted at exactly the right point.”

Subsequent forensic analysis confirmed the payload’s malicious intent. The attack never succeeded.

Precision over disruption

For Núclea, this incident reinforced a critical lesson: modern attacks don’t always look malicious—they hide within normal activity.

“What stands out to me is the precision,” Guilherme says. “Darktrace doesn’t rely on big, obvious signals. It’s effective in situations that fall outside the standard patterns we all know.”

Building resilience in a high trust ecosystem

For Núclea, cybersecurity is not just a defensive measure—it’s a business enabler.

Availability failures or successful breaches in the financial ecosystem can have immediate, large-scale consequences, from financial loss to reputational damage. Preventing those outcomes protects not just Núclea, but its partners and customers as well.

“Cyber resilience means keeping the business running—even under attack,” Guilherme explains. “And that requires people, processes, and technology working together.”

As AI continues to accelerate both attacks and defenses, the role of security is evolving. Precision, behavioral understanding, and intelligent automation are no longer optional—they’re essential.

“The easy days were yesterday,” Guilherme says. “The challenges ahead are bigger. We need to be prepared—internally and with partners that help us build resilience.”

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June 1, 2026

Defend What You Trust: Stories from the Front Lines of Modern Cyber Defense

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Modern attacks don’t always announce themselves, follow obvious patterns, or rely on known malware. Often, they move quietly inside trusted systems, authenticated sessions, and everyday behavior.

They don’t break in. They blend in.

That’s why an AI-powered defense is essential. It turns invisible signals into actionable insights at a scale neither analysts nor traditional tools can achieve alone.

Confidence is creating risk

One of the most dangerous assumptions in cybersecurity today is that strong controls equal strong protection.

Multi-factor authentication (MFA), for example, is widely viewed as a foundational safeguard. But as the CISO for a professional sports organization explains, that confidence can be misplaced. “A lot of organizations assume that once you have MFA, those accounts are safe. That’s not true.”

In one instance, his team identified a sophisticated attack where a threat actor bypassed MFA entirely, not by breaking it, but by going around it. A user’s authenticated session was hijacked and re-used, allowing the attacker to impersonate them without triggering traditional controls.

“Darktrace picked up that a session had been re-injected by the hacker, and we were able to block it right away,” he explains.

Attackers anticipate what we miss

Even well-trained users can become entry points.

“An email bypassed our existing security tools,” shares the VP of IT at a U.S.-based risk management services provider.  “The user missed one signal and entered their credentials into a malicious site. That’s what the bad guys count on.”

The organization responded quickly, but not before damage was done. Crucially, this occurred while Darktrace was in “watch mode,” before autonomous response was fully enabled. “Darktrace would have seen that and shut it down immediately,” he notes.

Mistakes and oversights like misconfigurations, forgotten machines, and missed patches can create serious vulnerabilities.

The CIO of a utility services organization shares an instance when Darktrace detected a breach to a client’s network via their ZTNA VPN due to misconfigured MFA. “Darktrace alerted us and autonomously blocked the scanning, preventing what could have been a ransomware-type incident.”  

The most dangerous threats are already inside

The Head of Security at a global business services provider knows firsthand how blind spots can persist inside environments. His team uncovered evidence of dormant ransomware artifacts sitting unnoticed within a company’s environment ¬¬– long before modern detection was in place.

“During a routine file transfer, Darktrace flagged the suspicious activity, identified the ransomware, and immediately quarantined the server,” he recalls.  While the attack was never executed, the implication was significant: the risk existed long before it was finally detected.

Cyber threats are also successful because they take advantage of normal human behavior, exploiting moments of cognitive overload, urgency, and trust.

The Executive Director of IT and Business Applications at a pharmaceutical lab describes the time Darktrace flagged an employee logging into Microsoft 365 from Singapore, despite him being physically located in the U.S. Darktrace immediately cut off his access and within minutes revealed that the employee’s son was using a VPN to play a video game.

While the threat was benign, it demonstrated the strength of AI to use contextual information to detect threats other tools miss. The information also saved security analysts hours of investigation and minimized downtime for the employee. “That level of precision and speed isn’t just convenient, it’s game changing.”

“Unusual” behavior is the new red flag

Detecting modern threats requires an understanding of what “normal” looks like and recognizing when something subtly deviates.

One security leader  at an AI technology enterprise described a scenario in which an employee connected to a proxy service in China. The service itself was legitimate, and although traditional tools didn’t flag it, the behavior was unusual for that user specifically.

“That’s what Darktrace picked up on. The activity turned out to be benign, but without visibility into behavioral deviations, it could just as easily have been something more serious.”

AI shifts defense from reaction to anticipation

These stories point to a fundamental shift by cyber attackers, both tactically and strategically. Because traditional security tools were built to detect what’s already known, modern attacks are often:

  • Credential-based, not malware-based
  • Behavioral, not signature-based
  • Subtle, not overt

They may operate within the boundaries of what appears normal, exploiting what organizations trust, not what they block:

  • Trusted sessions
  • Legitimate services
  • Human error

This is where AI is changing the equation. Rather than relying on predefined rules or known threat signatures, AI can:

  • Establish a baseline of normal behavior
  • Detect subtle anomalies in real time
  • Act autonomously to contain potential threats

Resilience, not perfection, is the new security standard

As these frontline experiences show, the organizations that lead are those that move beyond reactive defense and embrace AI as a core part of their strategy.

It eliminates the blind spots and uncertainty, says the CISO of a professional sports organization. “If you lack visibility, you’re not managing risk, you’re assuming it. AI gives you the actionable insights needed to turn uncertainty into control.”

And it provides the speed and agility that are vital when seconds matter, says the Executive Director of IT and Business Applications. “When Darktrace alerted us at 3:00 am to a ransomware attack, it had already quarantined the affected systems, blocked the attacker’s access, and provided us with the critical details and time needed to investigate. That action likely saved us hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars.”

The modern SOC has become a cornerstone of enterprise resilience, responsible for protecting data and operational continuity while enabling digital growth and innovation. For today’s security professional, that means success is no longer measured by what they keep out, but by what they protect: revenue, reputation, and trust.

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