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posted by martyb on Friday September 22 2017, @11:02AM   Printer-friendly
from the brought-to-you-by-Home-Depot,-Target,-and-Equifax dept.

I often talk about automation in my articles and it's a hot topic in general – a quick Google search reveals more than 100 million results for security automation. Given the global shortage of cybersecurity professionals, and the volume and velocity of increasingly sophisticated threats we all have to deal with, humans can't go it alone. Automation helps get more from the people you have – handling time-intensive manual tasks so they can focus on high-value, analytical activities. But the catch with automation is that it has to be applied at the right time in the security lifecycle in order to be effective.

You've likely heard the phrase: "dirty data in, dirty data out." Jumping to the end of the security lifecycle and using automation to take action – like automating playbooks and automatically sending the latest intelligence to your sensor grid (firewalls, IPS/IDS, routers, web and email security, endpoint, etc.) – can backfire. Without first aggregating, scoring and prioritizing intelligence you can actually exacerbate the dirty data problem.

[...] But with the sheer volume of threat data continuing to climb at a staggering rate, we need to start with the threat – automating how we gather, score and prioritize threat intelligence. Otherwise we're just amplifying the noise, wasting precious resources and hampering security – and that's the dirty secret.

Filter first, not last.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 23 2017, @10:19PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 23 2017, @10:19PM (#572178)

    On this topic, I've previous noted that spellcheckers are available gratis.
    I guess I'm doing that again here.

    Even when my spellchecker stumbles, Google usually provides good answers.
    In the 21st Century, I can't see any reason why a computer user should ever produce a misspelled word.

    a registered user [...] can have the "Post Anonymously" checkbox ticked

    Ah. Something I hadn't considered.
    Obviously, out of my experience.

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]