惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
H
Hacker News: Front Page
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
T
ThreatConnect
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
博客园_首页
T
True Tiger Recordings
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
B
Blog
IT之家
IT之家
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
F
Full Disclosure
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
C
Comments on: Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
博客园 - 【当耐特】
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
腾讯CDC
雷峰网
雷峰网
Security Latest
Security Latest
李成银的技术随笔
M
Microsoft Research Blog - Microsoft Research
L
LangChain Blog
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
C
Check Point Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
博客园 - Franky
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
V
V2EX
A
About on SuperTechFans
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
月光博客
月光博客
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
Vercel News
Vercel News
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
IntelliJ IDEA : IntelliJ IDEA – the Leading IDE for Professional Development in Java and Kotlin | The JetBrains Blog
IntelliJ IDEA : IntelliJ IDEA – the Leading IDE for Professional Development in Java and Kotlin | The JetBrains Blog
爱范儿
爱范儿
A
Arctic Wolf
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More

WeLiveSecurity

The quest for greater tech independence Why geopolitical turmoil is a gift for scammers, and how to stay safe FrostyNeighbor: Fresh mischief and digital shenanigans Eyes wide open: How to mitigate the security and privacy risks of smart glasses Fake call logs, real payments: How CallPhantom tricks Android users Fixing trivial passwords is as easy as 123456 A rigged game: ScarCruft compromises gaming platform in a supply-chain attack This month in security with Tony Anscombe – April 2026 edition The calm before the ransom: What you see is not all there is GopherWhisper: A burrow full of malware New NGate variant hides in a trojanized NFC payment app Ransomware’s back office: What the ransom note won’t say Why that next data breach alert could be a trap Supply chain dependencies: Have you checked your blind spot? Recovery scammers hit you when you’re down: Here’s how to avoid a ‘second strike’ As breakout time accelerates, prevention-first cybersecurity takes center stage Digital assets after death: Managing risks to your loved one’s digital estate This month in security with Tony Anscombe – March 2026 edition RSAC 2026 wrap-up – Week in security with Tony Anscombe A cunning predator: How Silver Fox preys on Japanese firms this tax season Virtual machines, virtually everywhere – but not all protected Cloud workload security: Mind the gaps Move fast and save things: A quick guide to recovering a hacked account EDR killers explained: Beyond the drivers Face value: What it takes to fool facial recognition Cyber fallout from the Iran war: What to have on your radar Sednit reloaded: Back in the trenches What cybersecurity actually does for your business How SMBs use threat research and MDR to build a defensive edge Protecting education: How MDR can tip the balance in favor of schools This month in security with Tony Anscombe – February 2026 edition Mobile app permissions (still) matter more than you may think Faking it on the phone: How to tell if a voice call is AI or not PromptSpy ushers in the era of Android threats using GenAI Is Poshmark safe? How to buy and sell without getting scammed Is it OK to let your children post selfies online? Naming and shaming: How ransomware groups tighten the screws on victims Taxing times: Top IRS scams to look out for in 2026 OfferUp scammers are out in force: Here’s what you should know A slippery slope: Beware of Winter Olympics scams and other cyberthreats This month in security with Tony Anscombe – January 2026 edition DynoWiper update: Technical analysis and attribution Love? Actually: Fake dating app used as lure in targeted spyware campaign in Pakistan Drowning in spam or scam emails lately? Here’s why ESET Research: Sandworm behind cyberattack on Poland’s power grid in late 2025 Children and chatbots: What parents should know Common Apple Pay scams, and how to stay safe Old habits die hard: 2025’s most common passwords were as predictable as ever Why LinkedIn is a hunting ground for threat actors – and how to protect yourself Is it time for internet services to adopt identity verification? Your information is on the dark web. What happens next? Credential stuffing: What it is and how to protect yourself This month in security with Tony Anscombe – December 2025 edition A brush with online fraud: What are brushing scams and how do I stay safe? Revisiting CVE‑2025‑50165: A critical flaw in Windows Imaging Component LongNosedGoblin tries to sniff out governmental affairs in Southeast Asia and Japan ESET Threat Report H2 2025 Black Hat Europe 2025: Was that device designed to be on the internet at all? Black Hat Europe 2025: Reputation is currency – even in the ransomware economy Locks, SOCs and a cat in a box: What Schrödinger can teach us about cybersecurity The biggest catch: How whaling attacks target top executives Phishing, privileges and passwords: Why identity is critical to improving cybersecurity posture MuddyWater: Snakes by the riverbank Oversharing is not caring: What’s at stake if your employees post too much online This month in security with Tony Anscombe – November 2025 edition What parents should know to protect their children from doxxing Influencers in the crosshairs: How cybercriminals are targeting content creators MDR is the answer – now, what’s the question? The OSINT playbook: Find your weak spots before attackers do PlushDaemon compromises network devices for adversary-in-the-middle attacks What if your romantic AI chatbot can’t keep a secret? Can password managers get hacked? Here’s what to know Why shadow AI could be your biggest security blind spot In memoriam: David Harley The who, where, and how of APT attacks in Q2 2025–Q3 2025 ESET APT Activity Report Q2 2025–Q3 2025 Sharing is scaring: The WhatsApp screen-sharing scam you didn’t see coming How social engineering really works | Unlocked 403 cybersecurity podcast (S2E6) Ground zero: 5 things to do after discovering a cyberattack This month in security with Tony Anscombe – October 2025 edition Fraud prevention: How to help older family members avoid scams Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025: When seeing isn't believing Recruitment red flags: Can you spot a spy posing as a job seeker? How MDR can give MSPs the edge in a competitive market Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025: Cyber risk thrives in the shadows Gotta fly: Lazarus targets the UAV sector SnakeStealer: How it preys on personal data – and how to stay safe Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025: Building resilience against ransomware Minecraft mods: When ‘hacking’ your game becomes a security risk IT service desks: The security blind spot that may put your business at risk Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025: Why software patching matters more than ever AI-aided malvertising: How chatbots can help spread scams How Uber seems to know where you are – even with restricted location permissions Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025: Passwords alone are not enough The case for cybersecurity: Why successful businesses are built on protection Beware of threats lurking in booby-trapped PDF files Manufacturing under fire: Strengthening cyber-defenses amid surging threats New spyware campaigns target privacy-conscious Android users in the UAE Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025: Knowledge is power This month in security with Tony Anscombe – September 2025 edition
Seeking symmetry during ATT&CK® season: How to harness today’s diverse analyst and tester landscape to paint a security masterpiece
2025-12-10 · via WeLiveSecurity

Business Security

Interpreting the vast cybersecurity vendor landscape through the lens of industry analysts and testing authorities can immensely enhance your cyber-resilience.

10 Dec 2025  •  , 7 min. read

Seeking symmetry during ATT&CK® season: How to harness today’s diverse analyst and tester landscape to paint a security masterpiece

Skip to the next paragraph if your eyes glaze over at the long, long titles of industry reports: the AV-Comparatives Endpoint Prevention and Response Comparative Report 2025, MITRE ATT&CK Evaluations Enterprise 2025, or the 2025 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Endpoint Protection Platforms.

Despite their wordy nomenclature, every report mentioned above has a beneficial role in canvassing the colorful endpoint security landscape. Learned professionals capture its essence, so that security operators can work out which solutions should go into their protection stack.

It’s a bit like a figure drawing class: every artist will sketch the subject from a different viewpoint. You can tell it’s the same person in the picture, but every angle uncovers fresh perspectives. It’s up to the incident analyst, security manager, or CISO to make sense of them. How? And is there a way to connect the lines between them? Let’s help you figure it out.

Key points of this article:

  • Well-known industry analyst houses like Forrester, Gartner, and specialist test labs like AV-Comparatives, SE Labs and others, provide a wide selection of cybersecurity tests and reports.
  • Some focus on a particular product, like XDR, others on features like anti-tampering, or report on the broader security market to provide a view from a higher altitude.
  • Some, like the MITRE ATT&CK Evaluations, go as far as to pit products against known advanced adversary attacks.
  • Navigating the volume of reports across multiple scenarios can be difficult. Tackling each selectively based on a security practitioner’s or organizations’ needs can make the final decision about a product/service purchase a lot easier.
  • The overall cybersecurity picture might appear chaotic in nature, but with the help of industry analysts, objectivity is applied to individual subjective interpretations, helping vendors and their customers make more informed decisions.

Penciling an outline

Every picture begins with an outline, and every security story begins with an endpoint in mind. These endpoints, located at the heart of organizational infrastructure, are responsible for keeping companies viable – from day-to-day reporting to major transactions.

Producing value is one thing, but keeping it safe is another: hence the need for appropriate endpoint security measures. Most well-regarded independent analyst and lab test reports focus on endpoints, since they’re at the crossroads of every activity, including malign.

The challenge is that there are a lot of these reports. For endpoint platforms in particular, you have reports focused on:

There’s a test for anything, basically. If you’re feeling a bit lost, don’t worry. Navigating the industry analyst landscape is not for the faint-hearted, but it’s not as difficult as it looks. There is also a massive benefit in using the individual tests and reports together to triangulate your perspective and sense-check assumptions.

Blocking in and layering

A major step when making a painting is blocking, accentuating light areas on a canvas, adding basic shapes and colors, followed by layering, giving more details and depth to the painting.

If you look at our list of various tests, you can make out a sequence going from more general reports (like the market quadrants) to some very specific ones (such as the Anti-Tampering test). Every report serves a different purpose and audience, but they all add up to a larger picture.

Navigating and finding what performance thresholds, features and operational approaches suit the needs of your environment and your security analysts is a question of personal interest and company requirements.

Interested in market trends? Go for one of the market quadrant reports. Are you a European CISO searching for local security solutions? Check out the ECSO Cyberhive Matrix, which accounts for three different categories: MDR, XDR, and SOC-specific tools like threat intelligence. Needing more transparency into the performance of a particular EDR solution against an advanced threat group? MITRE ATT&CK Evaluations Enterprise is the one for you then.

Did you know? The MITRE ATT&CK difference

MITRE’s Enterprise Evaluation is an annual reminder that there are a wide diversity of approaches to investigating the qualities of various security products and services. MITRE’s ATT&CK evaluation may be an outlier in that it is neither a commercial test (so, not a packaged product), nor does it deliver guidance or take stance on “what’s best”.

Perhaps the best way to position MITRE’s contribution here is as an “academic study” of utility/efficacy of detection and response tools across a variety of different use cases. Using the metaphor of an artist drawing a model from their own perspective, MITRE’s evaluation sits in each student’s chair, drawing the model from each and every perspective and then attempts to define how each location has impacted the resulting image(s) taken from that position.

At the same time, it’s also good to mix and match here. It’s said that a person is the average of five people they spend the most time with. From that perspective, a cybersecurity solution is only as good as its score across five different tests. Academics also rely on peer reviews to verify their work, and this is as close as it gets.

Finishing touches

The security painting is almost finished. What remains is to fill in a few spots, to touch up a few details.

For additional details, security managers should seek further confirmations of a vendor’s strength by exploring their partnerships (partner support or various joint efforts against APTs), their involvement in major initiatives and security events (like the Locked Shields cyber-wargames, or RSAC). These are all auxiliary efforts rounding out the “vibes” a security vendor gives.

Alternatively, if a vendor doesn’t care to get involved, then perhaps security isn’t really in their interests.

ESET’s take on testing

Independent testing is central to ESET’s commitment to transparency and product excellence. Independent evaluations explain how – and if – what we make works, and also gives us valuable insight into what we can adjust or improve to make it even better.

By participating in leading industry evaluations, including the MITRE Engenuity ATT&CK Evaluations – which assess detection capabilities against real-world adversary behaviors – we gain objective insight into our strengths, areas for improvement, and the effectiveness of new technologies. In a crowded cybersecurity market, this independent validation provides trusted, third-party proof that ESET delivers the protection and performance organizations expect.

But don’t take our word for it. See for yourself how we performed in this year’s MITRE ATT&CK Evaluations, whether the results in detection count/volume and protection align with your expectations, compare them with other tests and you might make out where ESET lies in the surreal landscape of cybersecurity.


Let us keep you
up to date

Sign up for our newsletters