IBM Introduces New Generative AI-Powered Cybersecurity Assistant for Threat Detection and Response..
IBM announced
the introduction of generative AI capabilities to its managed
Threat Detection and Response Services utilized
by IBM Consulting analysts to advance and streamline security operations for
clients. Built on IBM's watsonx data and AI platform, the new IBM Consulting
Cybersecurity Assistant is designed to accelerate and improve the
identification, investigation and response to critical security threats.
In addition to being included in IBM Consulting's threat detection
and response practice, the Cybersecurity Assistant will be part of IBM
Consulting Advantage,the AI services platform with purpose-built AI assets
designed to empower IBM consultants to deliver value for clients with
consistency, repeatability, quality and speed.
"As
cyber incidents evolve from immediate crises to multi-dimensional and
months-long events, security teams are facing the enduring challenge of too
many attacks and not enough time or people to defend against them,"
said Mark Hughes, Global Managing Partner of
Cybersecurity Services, IBM Consulting. "By enhancing our Threat Detection
and Response services with generative AI, we can reduce manual investigations
and operational tasks for security analysts, empowering them to respond more
proactively and precisely to critical threats, and helping to improve overall
security posture for clients."
IBM's Threat
Detection and Response (TDR) Services can automatically escalate or close
up to 85% of alerts1; and now, by bringing together existing AI and
automation capabilities with the new generative AI technologies, IBM's global
security analysts can speed the investigation of the remaining alerts requiring
action. Specifically, the new capabilities helped reduce alert investigation
times by 48% for one client. The new Cybersecurity Assistant delivers the
following:
Accelerate threat investigations and remediation with historical
correlation analysis
The Cybersecurity Assistant is designed to help speed up complex
threat investigations via historical correlation analysis of similar threats.
Built into IBM's TDR Services, the new capability cross-correlates alerts
and enhances insights from SIEM, network, EDR, vulnerability and telemetry to
provide a holistic and integrative threat management approach.
By
analyzing patterns of historical, client-specific threat activity, security
analysts will be equipped to be more proactive and precise. To help them better
comprehend critical threats, analysts will have access to a timeline view of
attack sequences, helping them to better comprehend the issue and provide more
context to investigations. The assistant will also auto-recommend actions based
on the historical patterns of analyzed activity and pre-set confidence levels,
speeding response times for clients and helping to reduce attackers' dwell
time. With the ability to continuously learn from investigations, the
Cybersecurity Assistant's speed and accuracy is expected to improve over time.
Streamlined operational tasks with an advanced conversational
engine
The Cybersecurity Assistant includes a generative AI conversational
engine that provides real-time insights and support on operational tasks to
both clients and IBM security analysts. In addition to responding to requests
such as opening or summarizing tickets, the conversational feature can
automatically trigger relevant actions, including running queries, pulling
logs, command explanations or enriching threat intelligence. By explaining
complex security events and commands, the TDR Service can help reduce
noise and boost overall SOC efficiency for clients.
"With
IBM's advancements to its managed security services, businesses can gain a new
level of insight into critical threats and benefit from technology that
continuously learns from actions taken within their specific environment. This
helps drive a cycle of increasingly accurate and rapid threat investigations,
which is especially crucial today as businesses face a shortage of security
resources and surplus in security risks and vulnerabilities," said
Craig Robinson, a Research Vice President for IDC's Security Services
Research Practice.
Built
in collaboration with IBM Research, the new IBM Consulting Cybersecurity
Assistant takes advantage of IBM's broader generative AI capabilities "
built on the company's Granite foundation models, refined for production within
IBM watsonx.ai, and tapping into IBM watsonx Assistant for the conversational
chat interface.
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