Many organizations struggle to find both the skilled resources and the funding required to deploy on-premises security intelligence solutions. The easy alternative is simply outsourcing the activity, but participants in certain industries are reluctant to relinquish control for safeguarding their trade secrets and customer private data. One significant network breach can damage the brand reputation and potentially result in business failure when handled poorly. If you’re one of these organizations, you want to maintain a higher degree of control but have heretofore had few options outside of doing everything yourself or hiring professional services consultants or managed service providers.

Why Outsourcing?

Cloud-based security intelligence solutions can help you address these two main pain points using a hybrid model. Clients benefit from outsourcing the infrastructural work associated with deploying and maintaining a security intelligence or next-generation security information and event management (SIEM) solution and save capital budget expenses by easily integrating a SIEM platform. This also helps reduce your time to value since experienced professionals use the cloud resources for delivering the service — typically in a period of days rather than weeks or months.

Outsourcing your security intelligence infrastructure to maximize existing IT resources provides a similar benefit to hiring a lawn service company to keep your estate grounds looking good. Beyond regularly scheduled mowings, the turf experts also troubleshoot issues with moss, grubs and other pests that cause bare spots so you have more time to watch the game. Security infrastructure vendors similarly apply bug-fix releases and vulnerability patches to improve the efficiency of, and remove potential risks in, IT security software. Lawn service vendors apply fertilizer to properly feed the grass throughout the year, and they aerate and overseed in the fall to support new growth next spring — similar to the way in which infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) vendors transparently grow appliance processing power or add storage capacity to support business growth.

More Benefits of Cloud-Based Security Intelligence

Some additional benefits for using top security intelligence solutions on the cloud include:

  • Market-leading technology from a tier-1 vendor;
  • On-demand incremental capacity increases for collecting data through seasonal peak periods;
  • Incorporation of real-time threat intelligence;
  • Physical segregation of your security data;
  • Future upgrade paths to integrated risk and vulnerability management.

This new model allows you to achieve greater security visibility by focusing all your available resources on monitoring for evidence of attacks, fraud and advanced threats, as well as performing any necessary compliance reporting. Your team remains in control and must plan for and initiate all remediation activities. Of course, you can also work with security services to help monitor the network even if it’s just for gap periods like weekend coverage. And there’s nothing like doing a little pre-planning around emergency response services, including outsourcing on-call resources for a faster and better-orchestrated response should lightning strike.

Learn more about The Case for Security Intelligence Services, Hosted from the Cloud

More from Intelligence & Analytics

Hive0051’s large scale malicious operations enabled by synchronized multi-channel DNS fluxing

12 min read - For the last year and a half, IBM X-Force has actively monitored the evolution of Hive0051’s malware capabilities. This Russian threat actor has accelerated its development efforts to support expanding operations since the onset of the Ukraine conflict. Recent analysis identified three key changes to capabilities: an improved multi-channel approach to DNS fluxing, obfuscated multi-stage scripts, and the use of fileless PowerShell variants of the Gamma malware. As of October 2023, IBM X-Force has also observed a significant increase in…

Email campaigns leverage updated DBatLoader to deliver RATs, stealers

11 min read - IBM X-Force has identified new capabilities in DBatLoader malware samples delivered in recent email campaigns, signaling a heightened risk of infection from commodity malware families associated with DBatLoader activity. X-Force has observed nearly two dozen email campaigns since late June leveraging the updated DBatLoader loader to deliver payloads such as Remcos, Warzone, Formbook, and AgentTesla. DBatLoader malware has been used since 2020 by cybercriminals to install commodity malware remote access Trojans (RATs) and infostealers, primarily via malicious spam (malspam). DBatLoader…

New Hive0117 phishing campaign imitates conscription summons to deliver DarkWatchman malware

8 min read - IBM X-Force uncovered a new phishing campaign likely conducted by Hive0117 delivering the fileless malware DarkWatchman, directed at individuals associated with major energy, finance, transport, and software security industries based in Russia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, and Estonia. DarkWatchman malware is capable of keylogging, collecting system information, and deploying secondary payloads. Imitating official correspondence from the Russian government in phishing emails aligns with previous Hive0117 campaigns delivering DarkWatchman malware, and shows a possible significant effort to induce a sense of urgency as…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today