Drawing from last year’s acquisition of RiskIQ, Microsoft is adding two new threat-intelligence applications to its Defender product family, and separately offering new detection and response capabilities for SAP ERP systems to its Sentinel SIEM (security information and event management) product.
Combining intelligence from the security research team at RiskIQ with existing in-house security findings, Microsoft has developed Microsoft Defender Threat Intelligence, a standalone library of raw adversary data. Microsoft says it is offering the library for free, accessible directly by all users, or from within its existing Defender family of security products, according to a blog post from Vasu Jakkal, a Microsoft vice president for security, compliance, identity, and management.
More Stories
NVD Revamps Operations as Vulnerability Reporting Surges
The NVD program manager has announced undergoing process improvements to catch up with its growing vulnerability backlog Read More
Friday Squid Blogging: Squid and Efficient Solar Tech
Researchers are trying to use squid color-changing biochemistry for solar tech. This appears to be new and related research to...
Google Cloud: Top 5 Priorities for Cybersecurity Leaders Today
Experts at the Google Cloud Next event set out how security teams need to adapt their focuses in the wake...
AI Vulnerability Finding
Microsoft is reporting that its AI systems are able to find new vulnerabilities in source code: Microsoft discovered eleven vulnerabilities...
Ransomware reaches a record high, but payouts are dwindling
Will you be shedding a tear for the cybercriminals? Read more in my article on the Tripwire blog. Read More
Cyble Urges Critical Vulnerability Fixes Affecting Industrial Systems
Rockwell Automation, Hitachi Energy and Inaba Denki Sangyo have products affected by critical vulnerabilities carrying severity ratings as high as...