Cyber 2.0 announced on Wednesday that it is rolling out an AI-generated customer report for enterprise networks and a prevention system for operational technology and IoT that aims to block attack propagation, the company said in a statement. The firm presented the tools as a means to reveal vulnerabilities in existing defenses and safeguard industrial environments before controllers face harm.
Unlike tools that try to block malicious code on the compromised host, Cyber 2.0 allows the program to exit and then blocks it at the receiving endpoint, which the company argues proves the attack had bypassed other layers. In OT and IoT, the firm says it prevents attacks before they reach controllers, operating without software agents and functioning in fully air-gapped networks.
Challenging incumbents
Cyber 2.0 publicly challenged leading vendors and claimed organizations spend heavily on systems that still miss many attacks. The company described its offering as a “goalkeeper” that must not fail, while other layers can.
Israeli organizations have faced about 2,000 cyberattacks per week in 2025, with telecom and transport firms hit above the global average, according to Check Point data reported this month. That pressure followed a mid-June surge, when attacks spiked roughly 700% after strikes on Iran, Radware reported.
Researchers also revealed Microsoft Teams flaws that allow chat spoofing and identity manipulation, underscoring risks of lateral movement in enterprises. Meanwhile, cyber and AI led tech fundraising in Israel in 2025, per the first findings published by LeumiTech and IVC.
“In the IT domain, this is a groundbreaking step that exposes the full scope of malware that other vendors fail to stop from spreading within customers’ networks,” the company said. “In the OT domain, the breakthrough is even more significant, providing real protection rather than only identification.”