Picture this: You are the leader of a security operations center (SOC) and yet another major ransomware attack is making headlines. Within minutes of the news breaking, you receive questions about your company’s exposure to this ransomware. You’ve implemented your incident response plan and you’ve woken your team members from their beds.

Your team is overwhelmed, working tirelessly to analyze the fallout from WannaCry, Petya and other recent high-profile attacks. You’ve also been dealing with compliance audits, investigating insider threats, moving between data centers and bringing staff members up to speed — all essential activities for any security team leader.

Closing the Skills Gap With Cognitive Security

Cognitive security tools can help analysts juggle these responsibilities. New tools are reaching the market at an increasing rate, some of which are already integrated with your current security information and event management (SIEM) system and SOC infrastructure. The SOC has been generating huge amounts of data for various initiatives, such as compliance efforts, performance data and more. It also generates lots of noise and false positives. Meanwhile, the new analysts you’ve hired are struggling to come up to speed, and your established rock stars are busy fighting fires.

SOC team leaders need reliable solutions to help them cope with this skills gap. It’s time to invest in cognitive tools to ring-fence the firefighters and tune the system to reduce false positives. When determining which solutions to invest in, look for products that are simple, efficient and compatible with existing infrastructure. It’s also worth considering whether these tools can be tested at a responsible speed.

Augmenting Human Intelligence With Automated Insights

There are solutions that deliver on all these features and more. The centerpiece of IBM’s new Cognitive SOC is QRadar Advisor with Watson. It combines IBM QRadar, the industry’s leading security analytics platform, with the cognitive capabilities of Watson for Cyber Security to automatically investigate and qualify security incidents. It also integrates with most SIEM tools using a wizard-based solution. Most importantly, it enables analysts to stop fighting fires and focus on strategies to proactively protect the network from ransomware and other threats.

The cybersecurity skills gap is no match for Watson. Cognitive security augments those inexperienced new hires by uncovering hidden threats and automating insights. With this collective knowledge at their fingertips, your analysts can respond to threats with unprecedented speed and accuracy, and your rock stars have more time to improve your platform — and maybe get some much-needed shut-eye.

More from Artificial Intelligence

How red teaming helps safeguard the infrastructure behind AI models

4 min read - Artificial intelligence (AI) is now squarely on the frontlines of information security. However, as is often the case when the pace of technological innovation is very rapid, security often ends up being a secondary consideration. This is increasingly evident from the ad-hoc nature of many implementations, where organizations lack a clear strategy for responsible AI use.Attack surfaces aren’t just expanding due to risks and vulnerabilities in AI models themselves but also in the underlying infrastructure that supports them. Many foundation…

The straight and narrow — How to keep ML and AI training on track

3 min read - Artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) have entered the enterprise environment.According to the IBM AI in Action 2024 Report, two broad groups are onboarding AI: Leaders and learners. Leaders are seeing quantifiable results, with two-thirds reporting 25% (or greater) boosts to revenue growth. Learners, meanwhile, say they're following an AI roadmap (72%), but just 40% say their C-suite fully understands the value of AI investment.One thing they have in common? Challenges with data security. Despite their success with AI…

Will AI threaten the role of human creativity in cyber threat detection?

4 min read - Cybersecurity requires creativity and thinking outside the box. It’s why more organizations are looking at people with soft skills and coming from outside the tech industry to address the cyber skills gap. As the threat landscape becomes more complex and nation-state actors launch innovative cyberattacks against critical infrastructure, there is a need for cybersecurity professionals who can anticipate these attacks and develop creative preventive solutions.Of course, a lot of cybersecurity work is mundane and repetitive — monitoring logs, sniffing out…

Topic updates

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