SIEM and XDR: What’s Converging, What’s Not

SIEM and XDR: What’s Converging, What’s Not

Let’s start with the conclusion: Security incident and event management (SIEM) isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

Today, most security analysts are using their SIEMs for detection and response, making it the core tool within the security operations center (SOC). SIEM aggregates and monitors critical security telemetry, enables companies to monitor and detect threats specific to their environment and policy violations, and addresses key regulatory and compliance use cases. It has served – and will continue to serve – very important, specific purposes in the security technology stack.

Where SIEMs have traditionally struggled is in keeping pace with the threat landscape. It expands and changes daily. Very, very few security teams have the resources to consume all the relevant threat intelligence, then create the rules and configure the detections necessary to find them.

Rapid7’s SIEM, InsightIDR, is the exception, designed with a detections-first approach.

InsightIDR leverages internal and external threat intelligence, encompassing your entire attack surface. Our detection library includes threat intelligence from Rapid7’s open-source community, advanced attack surface mapping, and proprietary machine learning. Detections are curated and constantly fine-tuned by our expert Threat Intelligence and Detections Engineering team.

InsightIDR is the only SIEM that can actually do extended detection and response (XDR). And we can’t help but think all the XDR buzz is the security industry’s way of letting you know that, yes, detection and response performance is still lacking.

A cloud SIEM can provide a strong XDR foundation — agile, tailored, adaptable, and elastic

A cloud SIEM approach give ..

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