Every open port is a door. Every login attempt is someone trying the handle. Every line in your auth log is something probing for weakness. Romp watches all of it, tells you exactly what’s happening, and locks the doors behind you.
Every file change. Every open port. Every login attempt. Every config edit. Romp runs it through a local AI trained to spot what doesn’t belong. It doesn’t sleep. It doesn’t take breaks. It doesn’t forget to check.
When Romp finds a hole, it doesn’t just write a report. It tests whether the hole is actually exploitable. It hardens your config so it doesn’t happen again. Then it keeps watching.
The AI runs locally. Your logs never leave your building. No cloud. No API keys. No vendor that can get breached and take your data with them. What’s yours stays yours.
That old desktop in the closet. A VPS. A rack server. A laptop. If it has a CPU from the last decade and 4GB of RAM, it runs Romp. No enterprise hardware. No GPU required.
Maybe you set it up years ago. Maybe you inherited it. You know there are ports open. You know there are login attempts in the logs. You just don’t know how bad it is. Romp will tell you in under a minute.
romp status. See everything.
A website. A database. A business app. Family photos. Whatever it is, if it’s on a server, someone is trying to get to it. Romp watches it around the clock and alerts you the second something changes.
You know you should audit your configs. You know your SSH setup could be better. You know there are services running that probably shouldn’t be. Romp audits everything and tells you exactly what to fix.
MSPs, freelancers, agencies. Your clients ask if their servers are
secure. Now you can hand them a real report — not a checkbox
on a form. One command: romp report.
Available to United States customers only. Romp is classified as a dual-use cybersecurity tool under U.S. export control guidelines. Romp is for authorized security testing only — read the Acceptable Use Policy.