July 4, 2026
๐ A quick update on CVE.Tools
A week ago I shared CVE.Tools here on Medium. Since then, weโve been closely watching how security professionals actually use it.

By Evgeny Ermakov
1 min read
The first numbers are encouraging:
๐ฅ Around 500 security professionals visit CVE.Tools every day.
๐ Google Search is gaining momentum:
- Search clicks almost doubled
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- Over 5,200 search impressions
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- Average position improved to 8.7
๐ค People are also discovering us through AI:
- ChatGPT
- Perplexity
- Gemini
- Microsoft Copilot
That's exciting because it means people are finding vulnerability intelligence in entirely new ways.
We've also learned something important:
- People don't just search for CVEs.
- They search for products, vendors, exploits, attack techniques, and very specific software they need to investigate.
- Some of the most viewed vulnerabilities this week included Microsoft, Citrix, Adobe, Roundcube and Cacti issues, which gives us a good picture of what security teams are dealing with right now.
- Every search teaches us what information is missing and what we should build next.
We're still at the very beginning, and the goal isn't to build another CVE database.
The goal is to build the place where security researchers, pentesters, SOC analysts and vulnerability managers can answer one simple question: "Should I care about this vulnerability, and what should I do next?"
Thanks to everyone who has visited, shared feedback, and reported bugs. Every suggestion helps shape the product.
๐ https://cve.tools