Filecatalyst - Outflank

Comparing a C2 evasion framework to an enterprise MFT solution might seem odd—until you realize both solve the same problem: moving data without getting stopped.

So why compare them? Because Red Teams and Enterprise IT both need to answer one question: How do I get my data from Point A to Point B without the firewall killing me? Outflank (The Adversary) Outflank’s tooling is designed to bypass Blue Teams. Their Outflank-C2 framework uses Microsoft Graph API and other trusted cloud services to hide command traffic. They don't care about raw throughput; they care about living off the land . Their file transfer methods look like HTTPS requests to graph.microsoft.com . To a firewall, it’s just Outlook sync traffic. outflank filecatalyst

FileCatalyst assumes you have permission to send the file. Its goal is 100% line speed . It uses UDP-based acceleration to overcome latency (e.g., sending a 10GB file from London to Sydney). However, traditional enterprise firewalls hate UDP bulk transfers. FileCatalyst often requires explicit allowlisting and dedicated ports. The "Outflank" Problem for FileCatalyst Admins If you are an IT admin running FileCatalyst, you should be terrified of Outflank. Why? Comparing a C2 evasion framework to an enterprise

I have framed this from a perspective, as Outflank is a tool for offensive security, while FileCatalyst is a high-speed file transfer solution for business. Title: Outflank vs. FileCatalyst: Why Red Teams Don’t Use FTP (And You Shouldn’t Either) Outflank (The Adversary) Outflank’s tooling is designed to

When security professionals hear "FileCatalyst," they think of —massive UDP-based transfers, latency tolerance, and moving multi-terabyte datasets across continents.