December 20, 2016 By John Bruce 2 min read

Security teams are becoming overwhelmed with the increasing volume and complexity of security incidents and the struggle to hire enough skilled staff to process them. As IBM Security’s latest study showed, cyberattacks such as ransomware are clever, damaging and on the rise. The traditional incident response (IR) runbook must be completely reimagined.

Changing the Game With Dynamic Playbooks

For years, runbooks were manual and static — often PDFs or spreadsheets that would become outdated as fast as they were produced. Resilient changed that five years ago. Our Security Orchestration, Automation, and Response (SOAR) Platform made runbooks current, customizable and collaborative, to say nothing of how much easier it made the whole IR process.

Last week, we changed the game again with our latest innovation, Dynamic Playbooks. Dynamic Playbooks create powerful and agile workflows that automatically generate response plans based on incident circumstances and adapt them in real time as new information about an incident is uncovered. This produces smart, fast and effective responses.

With Dynamic Playbooks, security teams can better leverage their organization’s existing infrastructure. They retrieve incident data from integrated security tools. Then the sophisticated logic engine updates the plan in real time, deciding to raise the incident’s priority, reassign ownership, add or remove specific tasks, or perform additional triage.

A Winning Strategy

Here’s an example of how a Dynamic Playbook accelerates the response to a malware attack: During an attack, the perpetrators add artifacts, including IP addresses and malware hashes, to an incident. Dynamic Playbooks automatically enrich these artifacts with threat intelligence from an integrated feed and determine that the incident’s IP address is a malware command-and-control (C&C) server. Consequently, Dynamic Playbooks automatically increases the incident severity, escalating the response process.

Additionally, if an executive’s device is infected, Dynamic Playbooks can automatically escalate the incident to a Tier 2 analyst and notify the legal team. If an integrated endpoint detection and response (EDR) solution reveals that the malware hash is found on several other computers in the organization, the Playbooks can direct IT staff to reimage the impacted machines.

This all occurs before the analyst even opens the incident. It helps ensure that the right analyst is working on the right tasks with the right tools, enabling security teams to more effectively manage today’s increasingly complex attacks.

More from

What we can learn from the best collegiate cyber defenders

3 min read - This year marked the 19th season of the National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition (NCCDC). For those unfamiliar, CCDC is a competition that puts student teams in charge of managing IT for a fictitious company as the network is undergoing a fundamental transformation. This year the challenge involved a common scenario: a merger. Ten finalist teams were tasked with managing IT infrastructure during this migrational period and, as an added bonus, the networks were simultaneously attacked by a group of red…

A spotlight on Akira ransomware from X-Force Incident Response and Threat Intelligence

7 min read - This article was made possible thanks to contributions from Aaron Gdanski.IBM X-Force Incident Response and Threat Intelligence teams have investigated several Akira ransomware attacks since this threat actor group emerged in March 2023. This blog will share X-Force’s unique perspective on Akira gained while observing the threat actors behind this ransomware, including commands used to deploy the ransomware, active exploitation of CVE-2023-20269 and analysis of the ransomware binary.The Akira ransomware group has gained notoriety in the current cybersecurity landscape, underscored…

New proposed federal data privacy law suggests big changes

3 min read - After years of work and unsuccessful attempts at legislation, a draft of a federal data privacy law was recently released. The United States House Committee on Energy and Commerce released the American Privacy Rights Act on April 7, 2024. Several issues stood in the way of passing legislation in the past, such as whether states could issue tougher rules and if individuals could sue companies for privacy violations. With the American Privacy Rights Act of 2024, the U.S. government established…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today