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Tag: threathunting

5 articles

threat hunting: Must-Have Best Defense Against Attacks

threat hunting: Must-Have Best Defense Against Attacks

Posters and training are a great start, but real readiness comes from proactive threat hunting that finds attackers hiding in your systems before alerts do. Pairing strong user awareness with telemetry-driven, human-led hunts shortens dwell time and turns everyday vigilance into lasting defense.

Analyst 207
observability and threat hunting: Must-Have Critical Fixes

observability and threat hunting: Must-Have Critical Fixes

The NCSC warns many organisations are blind to attackers already inside their networks and is urging urgent improvements in observability and threat hunting. Its practical guidance shows how better telemetry, retention and detection engineering can help teams find, contain and recover from breaches faster.

Analyst 207
detection gaps: Exclusive Best Practices to Stop Breaches

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.

Analyst 207
attacker surveillance: Exclusive Risky Ethics Debate

attacker surveillance: Exclusive Risky Ethics Debate

Huntress’s cheeky description of an attacker “on a silver platter” has split infosec — praised by some as a rare, practical learning moment and criticized by others for risking privacy, investigative integrity, and even giving attackers tips. The debate highlights a bigger question: how can defenders share real-world lessons widely without creating new vulnerabilities or harming victims?

Analyst 207
modular macOS backdoor: Stunning Dangerous Threat Revealed

modular macOS backdoor: Stunning Dangerous Threat Revealed

What if your Mac had been quietly harboring a stealthy backdoor for years? Researchers say ChillyHell—a modular macOS implant—evaded Apple’s protections for up to four years, showing how dormancy and clever design let attackers hide in plain sight.

Analyst 207