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Threat intelligence is analyzed information about cyber threats that helps defenders assess risk, prioritize action, and improve security controls.

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Threat intelligence is analyzed information about adversaries, their capabilities, targets, infrastructure, and methods, used to support security decisions. It can describe broad trends for leadership, likely actors and campaigns for defenders, or actionable details such as malicious domains, file hashes, vulnerabilities, and tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs). Practitioners obtain it from internal investigations, public reporting, telemetry, information-sharing communities, and other sources, then assess its reliability, relevance, and age.

Security teams use threat intelligence to prioritize vulnerability remediation, tune detection rules, investigate suspicious activity, and prepare incident-response playbooks. TTP-based intelligence generally remains useful longer than individual indicators, which can become obsolete or be changed by an attacker. Poorly sourced or context-free intelligence can create false positives, waste analyst time, or lead to unjustified attribution and defensive action. Collection and sharing may also expose sensitive organizational or personal information, so access controls, provenance, retention, and applicable privacy or legal requirements matter.

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If at first you don’t succeed, patch and patch again More threat intel teams are sounding the alarm about a critical Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) remote code execution vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2025-59287 and now under active exploitation, just days after Microsoft pushed an emergency patch and the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency added the bug to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog.…