Tag: alertfatigue
6 articles

Staff Burnout: Exclusive Report Reveals Critical Risks
Staff burnout is no longer a background HR issue — its a strategic threat: exhausted defenders mean slower detection, higher turnover, and wider openings for attackers. A new Security Magazine–backed report urges leaders to treat burnout as an operational vulnerability, not just a people problem.

staff burnout: Must-Have Fixes to Protect Best Defenses
Staff burnout is now the top threat to organizational security—teams are exhausted, turnover is rising, and defenders can’t keep up with smarter attacks. Fixing it means investing in people, smarter processes, and better tooling before stretched teams become the weakest link.

Embed AI Now: Must-Have Fix to Reduce Risk
AI can find vulnerabilities in seconds but also flood teams with noisy alerts — embedding AI thoughtfully with context-aware scoring, human-in-the-loop checks, and better telemetry turns automation into a force-multiplier that speeds remediation and reduces risk.

detection gaps: Exclusive Best Practices to Stop Breaches
Stop drowning in alert noise—prioritize the right telemetry, map gaps to MITRE ATT&CK, build chained detections and automated enrichment so analysts can find real threats faster. Start small, measure actionable alerts per analyst-hour, and invest in people and integration to close gaps before attackers exploit them.

Continuous Threat Exposure Management: Must-Have Best Guide
Ever feel buried in red alerts and endless tickets? Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM) flips the script—linking detections to business impact, validating exploitability, and prioritizing fixes so teams stop chasing noise and start reducing real risk.

AI triage: Must-Have Best Practices for Secure SOC
Drowning in alerts? Tines’ community workflow pairs AI triage with Confluence-hosted SOPs to automatically hand off the right playbook, populate incident context, and even trigger safe remediation—so analysts spend less time on drudgery and more on real investigations. With versioning, human-in-the-loop checks, and community-tested templates, teams can cut MTTR while keeping control and auditability.