If you are using @Cloudflare but still seeing your team battle targeted attacks, send me a DM.
We train a model specifically to your domain’s traffic, protecting your infrastructure while your team sleeps with agentic investigations and remediations.
https://t.co/IoFgmQVk66
@FlyaKiet@superset_sh Yeah works fine and now I’ve resorted to asking the agent (on the prompt) to fetch the most recent commit from origin… can dm you debug data if you need
@rodfernn So the consensus is that there is no flag in the .pt shared right? I've seen four teams come to the same conclusion, including our team at @vigilbase
@levelsio This is an aviation thing. Not a EU thing. Planes use AC supplied by ground equipment while at the gate, but many times such ground equipment doesn’t work as well as it could
Cloudflare gives teams a massive amount of useful security data.
HTTP requests.
WAF events.
DNS logs.
Access logs.
Gateway logs.
Workers traces.
Audit events.
The issue is not that the signals are missing.
The issue is that most teams do not have time to turn those signals into a coherent security story every week.
What changed?
Which assets were targeted?
Which detections mattered?
Which countries, IP ranges, or ASNs kept showing up?
Which datasets are enabled but stale?
Where do we think we have visibility, but actually don’t?
That’s the layer we’re building with Flarehawk.
This week we shipped weekly security reports delivered by email and Slack, with an exec summary and charts. We also taught Aegis to call out telemetry blind spots instead of pretending empty logs mean “nothing happened.”
I care a lot about that distinction.
“No evidence” and “no visibility” are not the same thing.
If you’re on Cloudflare and want your edge/security data to tell you what actually happened, not just sit in another dashboard, try Flarehawk.
https://t.co/nuvKEQaCFl
Because it’s outdated and the lack of competition in the Portuguese market doesn’t give them an incentive to be better. I can name you at least 20 other better apps that can do this and way more. Competition is a good thing, in Portugal we’re so against monopolies, except with SIBS and MB Way
The unauth account-delete one is exactly why I like testing APIs against live traffic assumptions, not just route lists. Auth middleware coverage and object-level checks drift fast when endpoints get generated or renamed. This is the type of thing we pick up with flarehawk. Give it a try if you’re on CF
https://t.co/nuvKEQbauT
🦅 Flarehawk Monday #2 is live.
📊 Weekly security reports, now delivered by email + Slack every Sunday, with an AI exec summary + fresh charts
🔌 Public API for orgs + connections
🧭 Aegis now flags your telemetry blind spots
Full changelog → https://t.co/k1jE400pqg