detections
LLMs in Security Operations: Helpful Sidekick or Hallucinating Intern?
Large language models (LLMs) are everywhere now. Your inbox, your SIEM, maybe even embedded in your security tool’s new “AI assistant” tab. It’s tempting to believe these tools are ready to triage ...
The Detection Rebuild, Part 2: Automating Detection Engineering Without Breaking the SOC
Coming off the heels of Part 1, where we focused on fixing the signal problem, Part 2 is all about scale. Because once you’ve cleaned up your alerts and improved your detection ...
The Detection Rebuild, Part 1: Fixing the Signal Problem
How to Stop Drowning in False Positives and Start Surfacing Real Threats Let’s be honest: most security teams aren’t short on alerts—they’re short on good ones. Every SOC eventually hits the same ...
Tycoon 2FA: How Storm-1747 Built an MFA-Bypassing Phishing Empire
We used to believe MFA was the ultimate line of defense. Then phishing kits like Tycoon 2FA showed up and proved otherwise. Unlike the crude clones of years past, Tycoon 2FA leverages ...
The Real Threat in the Middle: How Mid-Stage Adversaries Are Outsmarting MFA and Scaling Fast
For years, multi-factor authentication (MFA) has been the security world’s favorite answer to “what should we do about phishing?” But attackers don’t wait for the controls to get better—they evolve around them ...
Why AI is Just Another Tool in Our Blue Team Toolbox
You can’t scroll through LinkedIn, attend a security conference, or open a vendor whitepaper these days without hearing that AI is about to replace the SOC. Some companies claim AI can triage ...
How I Got ChatGPT to Write Ransomware (and Why That Actually Matters)
Introduction: The AI Cybersecurity Paradox If you’ve ever tried to ask ChatGPT to help you build ransomware, chances are you got shut down fast. Like, brick-wall fast. That’s because AI models like ...
Detection Engineering 101: Using AI to Write One Rule and Convert It Everywhere
Detection engineering is a beautiful, frustrating, and often tedious art. You write a killer detection for one SIEM, pat yourself on the back, and then—bam—your SOC lead tells you it also needs ...

