Security news aggregator

Latest coverage for Crowdstrike

CrowdStrike is a cybersecurity platform whose endpoint protection, incident response, and vulnerabilities can affect organizational systems and data.

2 headlines in this view

Refine the feed

Search across headline titles and summaries.

Tag briefing

Background for this topic.

CrowdStrike provides a cloud-native endpoint detection and response platform that monitors devices for malicious activity using behavioral analytics and threat intelligence. Its architecture relies on lightweight agents that continuously collect and analyze endpoint data in real time, enabling rapid identification of malware, fileless attacks, and advanced persistent threats. The platform’s cloud-based design allows centralized visibility and automated threat hunting across distributed environments.

Security practitioners should note that CrowdStrike’s reliance on cloud connectivity introduces potential risks if agent communication channels are disrupted or compromised. Additionally, the platform’s extensive telemetry collection raises privacy considerations and requires careful access controls. Effective deployment involves tuning detection rules to reduce false positives while ensuring timely alerts for sophisticated intrusions, making it a critical tool for proactive endpoint defense and incident investigation workflows.

Showing 2 most recent headlines Filtered view

Thinks customers may have forgiven it after revenue hits a record CrowdStrike can't yet confidently predict the financial impact of the failed update to its Falcon software that crashed millions of computers around the world last July, but is confident its third quarter results show customers can't find a better security product.…

Did we say CrowdStrike? We meant, er, The July Incident... IGNITE The sound of cyber security professionals spraying their screens with coffee could be heard this week as Microsoft claimed, "security is our top priority," as it talked up its Secure Future Initiative (SFI) once again and explained how Windows could be secured.…