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Impart Security Emphasizes Advanced Bot Defense and Safer WAF Policy Deployment in New Content Push

Impart Security Emphasizes Advanced Bot Defense and Safer WAF Policy Deployment in New Content Push

Impart Security continued to emphasize its focus on advanced application security this week, using a series of LinkedIn posts and blog content to spotlight underaddressed automated web threats. The company framed the initiative as an effort to close enforcement gaps in production environments and differentiate from legacy web application firewall providers.

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The firm highlighted a blog series dissecting the 21 automated threats cataloged by OWASP, noting that industry conversations often center on a handful of familiar risks. Impart Security reported that it has already covered denial of inventory, card cracking, scalping, carding, and credential stuffing, and is inviting practitioner feedback on which threats to analyze next.

Several posts focused on denial-of-inventory, or OAT-021, a bot-driven abuse case in e-commerce where automated agents repeatedly add items to carts without purchasing. Impart Security argued that conventional request-level defenses may miss these attacks and stressed the importance of monitoring full transaction lifecycles, including add-to-cart spikes, conversion drops, and synchronized cart timeouts.

The company also underscored operational challenges in deploying WAF and bot-mitigation policies, particularly the risk of false positives at revenue-critical endpoints like checkout. It pointed to “shadow mode” testing, where policies run against live traffic without enforcement, as a method to validate rules and reduce risk, noting that many teams lack this capability and under-enforce protections as a result.

For Impart Security, this week’s messaging positions its technology around behavior-based analytics, safer policy deployment, and protection of high-value transaction flows. If its products match these themes, the company could be well placed to win enterprise and e-commerce customers seeking more sophisticated defenses against automated fraud and abuse, reinforcing its longer-term growth prospects in a competitive cybersecurity market.

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