A defense technology company with Department of Defense contracts exposed user records and military training materials through API endpoints that lacked meaningful authorization checks, according to an account published by Strix, an open-source autonomous security testing project.
The issue affected Schemata, an AI-powered virtual training platform used in military and defense settings. According to Strix, an ordinary low-privilege account was able to access data across multiple tenants, including user listings, organization records, course information, training metadata and direct links to documents hosted on the Schemata’s Amazon Web Services instances.
Strix said the exposed materials included a 3D virtual training course for naval maintenance personnel with documentation marked confidential and proprietary, a course containing Army field manuals on explosive ordnance handling and tactical deployment, and hundreds of user records linked to bases and training enrollments. Additionally, the exposed information included names, email addresses, enrollment details and the military bases where U.S. service members were stationed.
Schemata acknowledged the affected endpoints were exposed May 1, after what Strix described as a 150-day disclosure process. Strix said it verified remediation before publication and published its account earlier this week, 152 days after its initial disclosure attempt.
The reported vulnerability did not require a complex exploit. Strix said it used a low-privilege account to watch normal browser traffic, identify API endpoints exposed through the application, and request high-value data using the same session. According to Strix, those requests returned records from outside the account’s own organization, suggesting the API was not properly enforcing tenant boundaries or user permissions.
In multi-tenant software, authorization controls are intended to ensure users can access only the data and functions assigned to their account or organization. The failure described by Strix would represent a basic breakdown in that model. The firm said some routes also appeared “write-enabled,” meaning a malicious actor could potentially modify or delete courses through update or delete requests, though the account does not say Strix performed destructive testing.
Strix did not respond to CyberScoop’s request for comment.
Schemata’s platform serves military and defense training environments, where user identities, assignments and course enrollments can reveal sensitive operational context. Even when information is not classified, records showing where service members are based, what training they are enrolled in and which materials they can access may create risks if exposed outside intended channels.
In a statement posted on the company’s website, Schemata said it did not have “evidence that any third party exploited the vulnerability to access customer data.”
The disclosure timeline also raises questions about how companies handling sensitive government-related data receive and respond to vulnerability reports. Strix said it first contacted Schemata on Dec. 2, 2025. According to the account, Schemata’s CEO initially responded, “I would love to hear what the vulnerability is, but I assume you want to get paid for it. Is that the play?”
Strix said it clarified the same day that compensation was not required and that its priority was user safety. It said it sent multiple follow-ups from Dec. 8-29, warning that the vulnerability was critical and asking where to send details. Five months later, after telling Schemata that researchers were publishing the information publicly, Schemata responded, acknowledged the exposed endpoints and said it would patch the issue immediately.
“After we received actionable details about the vulnerability and confirmed the security researcher appeared to be legitimate, our team remediated the vulnerability the same day, and the researcher independently verified the fix before publishing their findings,” Schemata’s statement reads. “We appreciate the security researcher bringing this to our attention and their contribution to the security of our platform.”
Schemata said it’s working with cybersecurity consultants to assist with its response and improve its security posture. The company also said it is in contact with government authorities about the vulnerability.
Defense contractors that handle Controlled Unclassified Information, or CUI, must report cyber incidents to the Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center (DC3). The center did not respond to CyberScoop’s request for comment.
According to contracting data, the company holds $3.4 million in contracts with the Department of Defense. In May 2025, Schemata announced $5 million in venture funding from several firms, including Andreessen Horowitz.

