Palo Alto Networks Unveils Cortex XSIAMPalo Alto Networks Unveils Enhanced Flexibility and Customization with Cortex XSIAM, the Precision AI Powered SOC Platform
Palo Alto Networks announced Cortex XSIAM, an AI-driven security operations platform that enables organizations to transform their security operations with a unified platform that delivers all critical capabilities in one powerful solution. Customers now have the ability to integrate their own custom machine learning models, seamlessly integrating third-party EDR data and also leveraging cloud detection and response capabilities. Cortex XSIAM now offers Palo Alto Networks customers the flexibility and customization to create a security solution that aligns perfectly with their organization's goals. "Data silos and manual repetition can't handle the speed of today's threats — a new approach is needed. Our customers are seeing transformative security outcomes; with Cortex XSIAM, large multinational companies have gone from a mean time to remediation of days down to minutes," said Lee Klarich, chief product officer at Palo Alto Networks. "From expanding our AI capabilities with BYOML, to opening data sources to treat third-party data as first party, and expanding to cloud, we continue to drive innovation with Cortex XSIAM to enable the SOC with the platform it needs to secure the entire enterprise." Cortex XSIAM allows organizations to simplify security operations with an integrated platform: The integration of SOC capabilities, such as SIEM, XDR, SOAR and ASM, into a single platform is a game changer for security operations. With Cortex XSIAM, organizations get dramatically better security and turbocharged SOC performance. XSIAM empowers organizations to take control of their security by offering a host of innovative features, including:
At the heart of CDR are three major innovations that will be available to Cortex XSIAM customers:
Moreover, XSIAM boasts over 1,000 integrations covering commonly used SOC tools for automated alert ingestion and orchestration of workflows, enabling SOCs to optimize processes and interactions across their entire security program. "Our research indicates that despite continuing focus on consolidation efforts, 86% of security stacks still rely on ten or more tools, prompting 98% to continue efforts to further consolidate and integrate their security operations tools," said Dave Gruber, principal cybersecurity analyst at Enterprise Strategy Group. "Emerging security platforms like Cortex XSIAM are helping organizations achieve consolidation objectives, as they add the ability to ingest third-party EDR telemetry and even absorb migration costs from legacy EDR solutions." Source: Palo Alto Networks media announcement |