Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

Normalize any logs for Cloud SIEM with Datadog's OCSF processor

Security teams need visibility across every system they defend, including cloud platforms, SaaS applications, security controls, identity providers, and custom services. But those systems all produce logs in different formats, with inconsistent field names and structures. That lack of standardization makes it harder to correlate events, write reusable detections, and investigate incidents quickly.

SIEM Migration in 68 Days

In this session, we will discuss how the University of Pittsburgh was able to modernize their data processing strategy, migrate to a new SIEM solution, and avoid ballooning SIEM costs all within 68 days from the first install of a Cribl product. We will showcase how we were able to use Cribl's software to easily handle the following scenarios: 100% agent replacement and consolidation using Cribl Stream Workers and Edge.

Cribl to the rescue for SIEM migrations

Your security teams face escalating data volumes, vendor changes, and cost pressures when they migrate between SIEM platforms. Cribl simplifies these migrations by giving you flexible data routing, reducing storage costs, and accelerating time-to-value. How? Let’s look at how a global customer used Cribl Stream to migrate CrowdStrike FDR logs from Splunk to Microsoft Sentinel efficiently and cost-effectively.

Optimize Your Event Analysis: Reports, Dynamic Filters, and Log Parsing in Pandora FMS SIEM

The latest Pandora FMS version presents key improvements to the SIEM, module, designed to enhance security event detection and management. These new features are available starting with Feature Release 782, allowing for optimized log analysis, report generation, and rule validation in distributed IT environments.
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Understanding Security Log Analytics vs. SIEM for Midsized Companies Targeted by Cybercriminals

SecOps teams at midsize companies face a unique set of challenges when it comes to managing organizational cybersecurity. Midsize companies (those with 100-999 employees and $50 million-$1 billion in annual revenue, according to Gartner) possess significant financial resources and valuable data that may be targeted by digital adversaries. But, unlike larger enterprise organizations, midsize companies can't always afford to invest heavily in the expensive security tools and dedicated IT security staff needed to prevent cyber attacks.