Synack introduces Glasswing-Readiness Assessment to validate attack paths
Synack introduced the Glasswing-Readiness Assessment, a security offering intended to identify and close gaps in an organization’s attack surface before AI-enabled threats can exploit them. The company linked the timing to recent progress in offensive Artificial Intelligence (AI) and to how security testing coverage is handled in many environments.
Synack said it introduced the offering in response to advances in offensive AI, including Anthropic’s Project Glasswing and emerging offensive AI capabilities such as Mythos. The release also stated that those models demonstrated autonomous vulnerability discovery and exploitation across major operating systems and browsers, with exploit development timelines reduced from months to days.
According to Synack, the Glasswing-Readiness Assessment combined Attack Surface Discovery with Sara (Synack Autonomous Red Agent) to explore environments at scale and identify attack paths. The Synack Red Team then validated findings by chaining vulnerabilities and eliminating false positives so organizations would see only what was real and exploitable.
Synack said organizations could request the assessment through go.synack.com/glasswing-readiness-assessment. Jay Kaplan, CEO and Co-founder of Synack, said, “Project Glasswing is exactly the kind of defensive innovation this moment calls for, and it signals just how capable these models have become,” and added, “Organizations need to match that energy in their own environments.”
In the release, Disaster Recovery (DR) Mark Kuhr, CTO and Co-founder of Synack, said, “Every weak point is now a viable entry,” and Paul Mote, VP of Solutions Architects at Synack, said, “You don't need to wait for offensive AI capabilities like Mythos to be widely available before you act.” Synack also described the assessment as addressing a structural gap, citing recent research that organizations test only 32% of their attack surface on average.