Despite years of investment in segmentation, asset visibility, and patch management, ransomware continues to cripple OT networks. So what’s going wrong?
Frenos and Forescout believe the answer isn’t more alerts, it’s better simulation.
In a recent joint webinar, Frenos CTO Harry Thomas and Forescout’s Christina Hoefer explored how adversary simulation, digital twins, and threat-informed visibility can shift organizations from passive detection to proactive defense.
Below, we summarize key themes from their conversation, including why ransomware is still a growing threat in operational environments, and how teams can regain control with strategic data and simulation-driven security.
Industrial ransomware is no longer niche. Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) has lowered the barrier to entry for attackers and increased their targeting capacity across verticals.
Forescout’s threat intelligence team (Vedere Labs) has observed a surge in attacks affecting:
“Attackers aren’t targeting control systems, they’re targeting everything around them,” Hoefer explained. “And because these systems are interconnected, even IT compromises can disrupt OT.”
Forescout delivers comprehensive asset intelligence through deep packet inspection, active queries, and integrations with existing IT/OT systems. Frenos consumes this data and builds a dynamic digital twin, powered by a simulated AI adversary named SAIRA.
SAIRA functions as an embedded red team. Her job:
Rather than just identifying vulnerabilities, Frenos helps customers understand:
The challenge in OT environments isn’t a lack of data, it’s what to do with it.
Most asset visibility platforms generate thousands of data points. Without context, this creates alert fatigue and slows remediation. Frenos turns that data into action by running analytics like simulating attack paths based on actual device configurations, communication rules, and segmentation policies.
Some core platform capabilities include:
“Instead of chasing every CVE, you can focus on the vulnerabilities that have reachable and exploitable paths,” Thomas noted. “Simulation helps you prove what matters.”
During the session, the team highlighted ransomware threat patterns from Unit 42 and internal Frenos research:
Both speakers agreed that OT environments face unique constraints:
That’s why simulation is so critical. Frenos doesn’t just simulate exploits, it simulates controls.
Security teams can test:
Forescout helps customers go beyond basic visibility:
“Most attacks don’t start in OT. They start in business apps or vendor systems that are ‘connected for convenience,’” Hoefer noted. “That’s where segmentation and policy enforcement become critical.”
Modern OT networks already generate a wealth of security telemetry, from vulnerability scanners to passive monitoring platforms.
The problem isn’t data. It’s actionable insight.
Frenos helps customers use existing tools better:
With AI-driven reasoning agents, digital twins, and multi-source data fusion, platforms like Frenos and Forescout offer a new way forward, one where threats aren’t just detected, but simulated, broken, and eliminated at their roots. Want to see how it works? Watch the full on-demand webinar here.
It’s time to move beyond alerts and toward assurance.
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