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June 29, 2022
A common question we receive is: should security orchestration, automation and response (SOAR) replace security information and event management (SIEM)? While the two technologies share some common components, they serve different purposes. As security teams look to modernize their security operations center (SOC) to meet the demands of cloud environments, automation is the key priority. To that end, it’s vital to understand the roles of both SIEM and SOAR.
SIEM software tools and products combine the capabilities of security information management (SIM) and security event management (SEM) tools into a comprehensive solution for cybersecurity. Typical functions of a SIEM software tool include:
Collecting, analyzing, and presenting security-related data
Real-time analysis of security alerts
Logging security data and generating reports
Identity and access management
Log auditing and review
Incident response and security operations
Principle SIEM use cases are:
Compliance - SIEM software tools can streamline the compliance process for organizations affected by data security and privacy compliance regulations. With SIEM tools, organizations can monitor network access and transaction logs within their database to verify that there has been no unauthorized access to customer data.
Incident investigation - When a breach is detected, SecOps teams can use SIEM software to quickly identify how the attack breached enterprise security systems and what hosts or applications were affected by the breach.
Vulnerability management - an ongoing process of proactively testing your network and IT infrastructure to detect and address possible entry points for cyber attacks. SIEM software tools are an important data source for discovering new vulnerabilities, along with network vulnerability testing, staff reports and vendor announcements.
Threat intelligence - The analysis of internal and external cyber threats that could affect your business. SIEM software tools provide a framework for collecting and analyzing log data generated within your application stack for threat detection.
SOAR optimizes processes and allows orchestration of different technologies into standardized response procedures for each type of attack, called Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs). It also automates repetitive tasks within these processes and ensures that all analysts follow the same procedures.
SOAR leverages the power of playbooks, machine learning, and progressive automation to enhance threat intelligence and speed up security processes.
SOAR relies on machine learning to predict repeatable patterns to help SOC teams distinguish between false positives and negatives and intercept and approach cyber attacks proactively, rather than reactively.
Recently SOAR use cases have evolved to include:
SOC process optimization
Incident response
Security threat investigation and hunting
Threat intelligence management
Security analysts recognize the necessity for cloud-based SOAR, with YoY adoption growing 85%¹. Cloud SOAR addresses critical customer requirements:
Reduces false positives and duplicate events
ML enables workflow-based automation (by recommending the right playbooks to respond to the incidents)
Supports both MSSP and complex corporate environments
Allows customers and partners to easily integrate tools and proprietary solutions with little coding experience (it also supports ‘’non-cyber’’ use cases)
Leverages automated playbooks to provide rapid data enrichment and correlation
Manages all aspects of the incident case management, from identification through remediation
Both SIEM technology and SOAR aggregate security data from various sources, but the locations and quantity of information sourced are different. While SIEM ingests various log and event data from traditional infrastructure component sources, a SOAR pulls in information from external emerging threat intelligence feeds, endpoint security software and other third-party sources to get a better overall picture of the security landscape inside the network and out.
After a SIEM alert, it's up to the administrator to determine the path of an investigation. In contrast, a SOAR automates investigation path workflows to begin triaging and subsequently apply remediation processes. In other words, a SOAR starts from where a SIEM platform's capabilities end. In practice, the two are complementary and work best in tandem.
Combining SIEM and SOAR answers these three key questions for SecOps teams to optimize their incident response:
How can I make our SIEM and threat intelligence data actionable and more effectively investigate alerts and incidents?
Given the increase in volume and scale across a growing attack surface, how can I prioritize my response to security incidents?
How can I rapidly respond to security incidents confident that analysts are following defined SOPs?
Statistics show that the dwell time of security incidents can be well over 200 days.
Capability | Legacy SIEM | Cloud SIEM | Cloud SOAR |
Security monitoring | Lack monitoring functionality. When something stops working, logs aren’t generated, and thus the SIEM can’t aggregate nor generate alerts. | Provides visualization through dashboards and embedded workflows of applications, workloads, and the complete security stack. | Receives malfunction alerts and activates appropriate investigation and response processes. |
Alert generation | Creates a large number of alerts. | Automatically triages and converts security signals into actionable, high-fidelity alerts called Insights. | Receives alerts and Insights from Cloud SIEM, or searches specific alerts automatically using Cloud SOAR daemons. |
Alert analysis and triage of false positives | Lacks automated alert triage, and often contributes to an increase in false-positive alerts. | Automated threat correlation and enrichments with predictive Confidence Scores, helping reduce false positives using crowd-sourced Global Intelligence ML model. | Completely automated workflow from alert validation to playbook activation and creates incidents only when real threats are detected. |
Industry standards dictate that all aspects of the incidents should be managed from a singular platform. Being able to work through each phase of that incident response life cycle inside of your SOAR platform. Here are seven factors that constitute a quality SOAR platform:
Open integration framework and lateral use cases
Progressive automation
Comprehensive incident case management
SecOps dashboard and War Room
Role-based KPI dashboards & comprehensive Reporting Library
Incident detailed reports are automatically created
The foundation of the modern SOC revolves around automating all time-consuming processes that slow SOC performance. With the amount of data waiting to be ingested by SOCs growing by the day, traditional SOCs can’t rely on manual labor to get the job done efficiently.
Both SIEM and SOAR connect disparate tools and use the aggregated data to provide insightful information to the security team, easing their job in incident detection, investigation, and remediation. Every business, organization, staff, tool and response process is different. That's why flexibility is key. Sumo Logic Cloud SOAR relies on its Open Integration Framework to easily blend within the deployed environment and integrate with different security technologies seamlessly, including SIEM. This allows the cyber team to build and maintain their incident response processes and harmoniously utilize Cloud SOAR and Cloud SIEM.
See how Cloud SOAR can quickly become an integral part of your infrastructure––reach out to us for a free, no-obligation demo.
¹ A SANS 2021 Survey: Security Operations Center (SOC)
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