Clear Capital operates at the intersection of real estate valuation and data infrastructure - meaning the attack surface is the property record itself. The company builds automated valuation models (AVMs), appraisal review platforms, and underwriting risk analyzers like AURA that lenders depend on to make mortgage decisions. When the data pipeline that feeds a valuation model gets corrupted or an appraisal platform gets breached, the downstream financial exposure is measured in loan portfolios, not just records. That's the threat model: high-value financial data tied to physical assets, processed at scale, and embedded in national mortgage workflows.
The technical stack centers on AI-powered property data analytics, automated floor plan generation through CubiCasa, and hybrid appraisal technology that blends algorithmic scoring with human review. These systems touch personally identifiable information, property financial data, and proprietary valuation methodologies - domains where data integrity is as critical as confidentiality. The company has operated since 2001 with a national footprint from its Reno, Nevada headquarters, serving real estate, mortgage lending, and real estate investment verticals.
For security practitioners, the draw is scale and consequence: protecting systems where a model manipulation or data poisoning event could ripple across lending decisions nationwide. The platform complexity - spanning AVMs, appraisal workflows, and underwriting risk analysis - means security work likely spans application security, data pipeline integrity, and infrastructure hardening across multiple product lines.






