Most breaches happen after authentication succeeds.
That's not a detection problem.
Superasystem is an independent security framework, built on the public Runtime Stability standard. Runtime Stability prevents loss of system control, maintains homeostasis under attack, and renders the outcomes of attacks worthless.
The failure is structural.
Modern security fails not because encryption is broken — but because control is lost at runtime. Attackers do not need to break your perimeter. They wait until authentication succeeds, then exploit what happens next.
Three structural failures repeat across every major breach:
- Granularity failure: the blast radius is larger than the unit of responsibility.
- Transferability failure: authentication tokens can be relayed in real time.
- Runtime failure: secrets exist in plaintext in memory long enough to steal.
Canonical definitions.
Source of truth for Runtime Stability, Runtime Immunity, and Runtime Security — formally published, citable, and independent of any product or vendor.
Positions, not marketing.
Concrete analyses of where current security assumptions fail — and what structural change looks like. Each essay is a position, not a product pitch.
A framework, not a product.
Superasystem documents structural security failures at runtime — where systems lose governance even after authentication succeeds. The framework defines the primitives: identity, memory, and execution.
This is not a compliance checklist. It is a technical and philosophical position about what must be true for systems to remain governable under attack.
Go to Framework →From prevention, to runtime control, to structural immunity — toward integrated stability.
Who this is for.
This framework is written for CISOs, security researchers, and engineers who are responsible for systems where breach is not a matter of if — but of what happens after.
If you are evaluating vendors, this site will not help you. We do not sell software or request demos.
If you are trying to understand why well-defended systems still lose control at runtime — start with the Framework.
Read About →