Sumo Logic Ponders Why We Aren't There Yet With Security Automation
Dave Frampton of Sumo Logic Security joins Dark Reading's Terry Sweeney at Dark Reading News Desk during RSA Conference to discuss how automation falls short in security management.
Explore the latest advancements and trends in information security automation. Stay ahead with cutting-edge cybersecurity automation news and insights.
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Background for this topic.
Automation in information security uses software to perform tasks like scanning for vulnerabilities, detecting threats, and enforcing policies without constant human intervention. It enables faster, consistent actions such as blocking malicious IPs or deploying patches based on predefined rules or machine learning models. This reduces manual effort and helps maintain security hygiene at scale.
However, automation can introduce risks if workflows are misconfigured or manipulated. Attackers may exploit automated responses to trigger false positives or disable protections, while errors in automation can propagate rapidly across systems. Security teams must carefully validate and monitor automated processes, balancing efficiency with oversight to prevent unintended consequences and maintain control over security operations.
Dave Frampton of Sumo Logic Security joins Dark Reading's Terry Sweeney at Dark Reading News Desk during RSA Conference to discuss how automation falls short in security management.
Web sites, cloud services, and API servers are seeing ever more automated traffic — or bots, as they are known — forcing companies to find ways to separate the digital wheat from the chaff.