Agentic AI changes the economics of an attack. What once took a skilled operator days now takes an agent hours, run in parallel, tirelessly, at a scale no team can match by hand. That shift does not wait for permission, and it will not announce itself.

Sablewire exists to put that same capability to work for the defense, and to use it better than an adversary would: with tighter scope, clearer evidence, and a human making every decision that carries consequence.

Approach

Offense informs defense

We run the attack so you can fix what it finds, and we run it in a way you can stand behind.

Reconnaissance, exploitation, and lateral movement run at machine speed, continuously, instead of as a single point-in-time exercise. But speed is only useful if it is trustworthy: a durable control layer sits between proposal and action, and nothing with real impact executes without sign-off.

The result is offense that behaves like a disciplined practice, not a script let loose. Every step is scoped, every action is logged, and every finding arrives with the proof to back it, not just a claim.

Principles

What we hold to, engagement after engagement

Control over autonomy

Automation earns speed, not authority. Every high-impact action still waits on a human decision.

Evidence over assertions

A claim of exposure is only as good as its proof. We hand you the trail, not a summary.

Discretion by default

What we find, how we found it, and who knows about it stay under your control, not ours.

Rigor over hype

Agentic tooling is a means to a disciplined result, not the pitch. The finding is the point.

Why the name

A sable wire is a black wire: hard to see against the dark, easy to miss until you are already caught on it. A tripwire, a trap, laid in the path an attacker assumes is clear. That is the posture we build toward: precise, quiet, and already there before the threat arrives.

See how this approach applies to your environment.

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