Faraday participated in the first international edition of Ekoparty Miami, bringing technical research, community presence, and conversations around the impact AI is having on offensive security.
Surrounded by talks, workshops, villages, hacking competitions, and open discussions, Ekoparty Miami became a meeting point for researchers, hackers, security teams, and technology leaders exploring the future of cybersecurity.
Taking advantage of this unique environment, Faraday’s Founder Francisco Amato and CEO Martín Tartarelli actively participated in conversations around how artificial intelligence is reshaping the way vulnerabilities are discovered, prioritized, and exploited.
In this context, Faraday shared the vision behind FaradAI: a new autonomous offensive security approach that combines automation, artificial intelligence, and Red Team expertise to help organizations operate security continuously and at scale.
FaradAI is designed to automate offensive tasks, reduce operational noise, and help security teams focus on what actually matters: real risk.
Learn more about FaradAI: https://faradaysec.com/faradai/
At our booth, we showcased the latest innovations inside the Faraday platform, including how AI can integrate into real vulnerability management workflows through MCP.
With Faraday MCP, AI agents such as Claude can now interact directly with offensive security operations, enabling teams to work with findings, vulnerabilities, and security processes using natural language while accelerating analysis, automation, and operational visibility without losing technical context.
Alongside product demos and conversations with the community, our research team also participated in technical talks focused on reverse engineering, AI, automation, and offensive security.
Main Track: “No Spec, No Problem: Automated ISA Reverse Engineering with Multi-Agent AI”
One of the highlights of the event was the presentation by Gastón Aznarez (Security Research Lead) and Dan Borgogno (Security Researcher), who showcased how AI agents can accelerate reverse engineering processes on proprietary architectures and undocumented firmware.
Their research addressed a critical challenge in embedded security and hardware hacking: understanding devices whose internal logic and architectures are undocumented, something increasingly common in routers, cameras, vehicles, industrial systems, and medical devices.
The talk became one of the standout moments of Ekoparty and received media coverage from outlets such as Clarín, which highlighted the growing impact AI is having on the future of hacking and offensive research.
Read the article: https://www.clarin.com/tecnologia/argentina-miami-ekoparty-abrio-primera-edicion-internacional-ia-chips-camaras-lupa_0_m2ZMgtC3BS.html

Track: “Automating your Continuous Scanning Cycle with AI and Public Tools”

Gabriel Franco, our CTO, presented “Automating your Continuous Scanning Cycle with AI and Public Tools”, a session focused on how public tools, automation, and artificial intelligence can be combined to build more efficient, scalable, and adaptive continuous monitoring processes for a new generation of threats.
The presentation explored how offensive security, automation, and AI-driven workflows can help reduce operational overhead while improving continuous exposure validation and risk assessment.
Beyond the talks, Ekoparty Miami was also an opportunity to connect with clients, partners, researchers, and friends from the community. We shared ideas, challenges, coffees, demos, nights out, and above all, many conversations about the future of cybersecurity.
Thanks to everyone who stopped by our booth, attended the talks, and joined us during this first international edition of Ekoparty.
We’re coming back with new ideas, new connections, and even more motivation to continue building the future of offensive security.
See you at the next one.



