Trail of Bits vs Bishop Fox
Trail of Bits
Co-founded in 2012 by Dan Guido and headquartered in New York City, Trail of Bits combines academic-style security research with hands-on engineering. The firm is best known for advanced software assurance work across cryptography, AI/ML, blockchain, and low-level systems, and for releasing widely used open-source tooling such as the Slither smart contract analyzer.
Pros
- Strong academic and research-grade reputation with published peer-reviewed work
- Open-source tooling footprint including Slither, Echidna, Manticore
- Recognised leader in smart-contract auditing for top-tier protocols
- Engineering depth that translates findings into custom defensive tooling
Cons
- Premium pricing and limited bench means long lead times
- Highly specialised, not a fit for routine commodity pentesting
- No published price list; bespoke statements of work per project
Pricing: Custom (contact sales)
Bishop Fox
Founded in 2005 (originally as Stach & Liu), Bishop Fox positions itself as 'the leading authority in offensive security' and is headquartered in Tempe, Arizona. Beyond traditional consulting it sells Cosmos, a continuous attack-surface management and offensive-testing platform that pairs automated discovery with human operator validation.
Pros
- Cosmos delivers continuous human-validated testing, not point-in-time engagements
- Strong consultant brand and notable open-source releases (Sliver C2 framework)
- Active Bishop Fox Labs research output and conference presence
- Highly tenured consultant base focused exclusively on offensive security
Cons
- Premium pricing aimed at upper mid-market and enterprise, no public price list
- Cosmos requires meaningful integration and a minimum spend
- Largely U.S.-centric delivery footprint compared with global rivals
Pricing: Custom (contact sales)