How the Microsoft Incident Response team helps customers remediate threats
Microsoft Incident Response is a global team comprised of cybersecurity experts with deep, highly specialized knowledge in breach detection, response, and recovery.
Microsoft Incident Response is a global team comprised of cybersecurity experts with deep, highly specialized knowledge in breach detection, response, and recovery.
In a recent investigation by Microsoft Incident Response of a BlackByte 2.0 ransomware attack, we found that the threat actor progressed through the full attack chain, from initial access to impact, in less than five days, causing significant business disruption for the victim organization.
The Microsoft Incident Response team takes swift action to help contain a ransomware attack and regain positive administrative control of the customer environment.
ramsac Founder and Managing Director Rob May shares insights on how automation can support SecOps and how to protect against phishing attacks.
Matt Suiche of Magnet Forensics talks about top security threats for organizations and strategies for effective incident response.
This is the second in an ongoing series exploring some of the most notable cases of the Microsoft Incident Response Team. In this story, we’ll explore how organizations can adopt a defense-in-depth security posture to help protect against credential breaches and ransomware attacks.
Microsoft Security is expanding its incident response presence and we’re excited to announce the Microsoft Incident Response Retainer is now generally available.
This guide provides steps organizations can take to assess whether users have been targeted or compromised by threat actors exploiting CVE-2023-23397.
This post is authored by Steven Meyers, security operations principal, Microsoft Cyber Defense Operations Center. Introducing a new video on best practices from the Microsoft Cyber Defense Operations Center In 2016, 4.2+ billion records were stolen by hackers. The number of cyberattacks and breaches in 2017 have risen 30 percent.
In 2005, just over a decade ago, the majority of large internet user populations, certainly as a percentage of their total national population, were still to be found in North America and Europe. In 2025, less than a decade from now, many of the largest internet user populations will be in Asia.