MazeBolt has announced the deployment of its RADAR™ platform at one of Greece’s largest financial institutions, strengthening the organization’s ability to detect and respond to distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) threats. The implementation, delivered in partnership with Pylones Hellas, introduces RADAR as an autonomous layer within the institution’s existing DDoS protection framework. The goal is to enhance visibility into vulnerabilities and continuously validate the effectiveness of current defenses across critical online services.

The move comes as concerns grow over the impact of artificial intelligence on cyber threats. MazeBolt recently highlighted how advanced AI models such as those developed by Anthropic are significantly accelerating the discovery of vulnerabilities and attack paths, reducing what once took days or weeks into minutes.

RADAR addresses this challenge by providing continuous, non-disruptive DDoS simulations. This allows organizations to identify weaknesses across their attack surface without requiring downtime or maintenance windows. Its SmartCycle™ capability uses AI to generate large datasets on potential vulnerabilities, enabling security teams to prioritize and remediate risks more efficiently. Through the deployment, the financial institution has gained comprehensive visibility into its DDoS protection posture. By continuously testing defenses in real-world conditions, the organization can fine-tune security policies and reduce exposure to potential attacks.

Matthew Andriani, CEO and Founder of MazeBolt, said that many organizations struggle not because they lack protective tools, but because they lack actionable data to optimize them. He emphasized that continuous validation is essential in an environment where threats evolve at machine speed. MazeBolt’s research supports this view, showing that 86% of enterprises test their DDoS defenses only once a year or less. As a result, 42% experiencing severe or extensive damage during attacks, highlighting the limitations of periodic testing approaches.

As AI-driven threat capabilities continue to advance, the deployment reflects a broader shift toward continuous and automated resilience strategies. Organizations are increasingly recognizing that static defenses and infrequent testing are no longer sufficient to keep pace with rapidly evolving attack techniques. By integrating AI-powered validation into its security stack, the Greek financial institution aims to maintain a proactive defense posture, ensuring its systems remain resilient against increasingly sophisticated and frequent DDoS attacks.

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