Discover Your Weakest Link

 

Our security engineers have breached the DoD, Apple, Intel, and AT&T. Rest easy with a tailored Penetration Test by a team of seasoned engineers.

For a limited time, take 20% off your first Penetration Test. Click below to learn more.

 

What's included

Silent Breach’s end-to-end service takes care of everything from initial discovery
through the final confirmation that all vulnerabilities have been understood and addressed.

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Comprehensive Coverage

All of our security tests come with a free mitigation guide, retest, digital badge, and a threat intelligence brief.

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Demonstrated
Results

Our security researchers have discovered 0-day flaws for the DoD, AT&T, Apple, and Intel. Ask for online references!

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Money Back
Guarantee

Silent Breach is the only major cybersecurity firm to offer a full refund if we are unable to find a vulnerability.

Talk with an Expert

Schedule a complimentary 30-minute consultation and receive a same-day quote.

 

What types of Penetration Tests do we offer?


External

External pentests attempt to compromise your assets from outside your perimeter network. We test all internet-facing components (websites, email servers, DNS servers, and so on) for potential security gaps that would allow an attacker to breach the system and gather or damage sensitive data.

Internal

Over two thirds of computer intrusions originate from within the company. Internal attacks can have a disproportionately large impact on a business and its processes given the nature of internal trust relationships. Inside information gives an attacker an important edge in stealing sensitive information or disrupting company services.

Black Box

Black box testing refers to testing a system without any prior knowledge of the target. All information is gathered from either public sources, or through a specific assessment of the client's infrastructure. Black box testing is usually preferred to simulate real-life attacks from external hackers.

 

White Box

White box testing refers to testing a system with shared knowledge of the system, in full collaboration with the client and their technical staff. White box testing is usually preferred when simulating internal attacks, where employees might exploit well-known flaws in the system. 

 

Grey Box

Grey box testing is a combination of black and white box testing, meaning that we will conduct penetration testing with a limited amount of information on the target(s). This is usually preferred for cost efficiency reasons and to save time gathering the information required during a black box test.