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Intel 471 Blog

TeamPCP Supply Chain Attacks Turning Geopolitical Tension into Actionable Intelligence CVE-2025-68613: Zerobot botnet exploits critical vulnerability impacting n8n AI orchestration platform Introducing Cyber Threat Exposure Bundle: A Unified Approach to External Risk CVE-2026-20127: Critical Cisco SD-WAN vulnerability exploited in wild Handala Threat Group OpenClaw: A viral AI assistant and a magnet for infostealer malware and ClickFix trickery Israeli, US strikes against Iran triggers a surge in hacktivist activity CVE-2026-1731: Finding a critical RCE in an age of AI-driven vulnerability research Born to bypass MFA: Taking down Tycoon 2FA The UK Cyber Security Resilience Bill How AI and the human advantage beat tomorrow’s threats Winter Olympics 2026: Hacktivism Surges Ahead of Protests and Suspected Sabotage How Threat Hunting and “Good” Metrics Help The Business Likely fake ransomware operator 0APT causes panic — Our analysis Hunting APTs: from state policy to TTPs CrazyHunter Ransomware DevMan Ransomware Introducing HUNTER Tuning: a New Tool for Driving Behavioral Threat Hunt Detections Battling check fraud in the U.S. Gootloader Malware Update Shai-Hulud Worm 2.0 New FvncBot Android banking trojan targets Poland White Paper Preview: Black "Fraud Day” and Beyond — The Key Cyber Threats Facing the Retail Sector this Holiday Season Threat hunting case study: Detecting IAB activity Using deception to extract cyber threat intelligence Lynx Ransomware Qilin Ransomware Group ClickFix: Tricking users into installing infostealers Cybercrime Takedowns: Trust, Partnerships and Focus How card fraud is powered by underground card checkers Tracking down The Com Turning Chaos into Clarity: The Next Phase of Intel 471’s Geopolitical Intelligence Solution The FBI’s Group 78: Covertly fighting ransomware? How threat actors bypass multifactor authentication Crimson Collective In a digital age, US paper check fraud flourishes How you can defend against AI-driven fraud and phishing Detecting cybercriminal activity on Telegram NPM - Shai-Hulud Worm Threat hunting case study: ToolShell AMOS Stealer How AI can (and can’t) help in threat hunting The Phrack leak: Examining an APT’s workstation How initial access offers power intrusions and ransomware Drawing value from cyber threat intelligence “Pig-Butchering” Scams: The Dark Side of Social Engineering and Why Terminology Matters After disruption, XSS cybercrime forum faces loss of trust Update: Salt Typhoon Bridging the CTI Gap: New Exposure Modules on Verity471 Deliver Market-Disrupting Views of Threats Introducing Verity471: Cyber Threat Intelligence Ready to Operationalize FileFix Social Engineering Technique Guided Threat Hunts Takes Your Behavioral Threat Hunting to the Next Level Defending against doxing CVE-2025-53770 - Microsoft Sharepoint Mass Exploitation (ToolShell) Threat hunting case study: Lumma infostealer Pro-Russian hacktivism: Shifting alliances, new groups and risks mommy Access Broker NATO summit commences in tandem with tense cyber, kinetic conflict A look at ‘Tinker,’ Black Basta’s phishing fixer, negotiator Threat hunting case study: DragonForce Two critical challenges facing CTI teams and how to overcome them: Intel 471’s additional insights into the SANS 2025 CTI Survey Android malware trends: Stealthier, easier-to-use Fingerprinting threat actors by their anonymity techniques DanaBot malware disrupted, threat actors named Intel 471 brings HUNTER behavioral threat hunts to Google Security Operations SANS 2025 CTI Survey: It’s Business Time for Cyber Risk How an alleged Russian hacker slipped away Threat hunting case study: Medusa ransomware CVE-2025-31324 - SAP NetWeaver Vulnerability DragonForce Ransomware Managing a cyber crisis LabHost: A defunct but potent phishing service Understanding and threat hunting for RMM software misuse Threat-hunting case study: Windows Management Instrumentation abuse VanHelsing Ransomware An in-depth look at Black Basta's TTPs Six Key Takeaways From the SANS 2025 Threat Hunting Survey Update: Medusa Ransomware Writing high-quality IDS detection rules Threat hunting case study: RMM software Update: LockBit Ransomware Zservers: Bulletproof hosting for online crime Update: Black Basta Ransomware and Threat Group Black Basta exposed: A look at a cybercrime data leak BadPilot Campaign The evolution of Russian cybercrime Android trojan TgToxic updates its capabilities Threat hunting case study: SocGholish DeepSeek AI poses cybersecurity risks Law enforcement hammered cybercrime in 2024. Is it working? Remote Monitoring and Management (RMM) Abuse How threat actors are using artificial intelligence Threat hunting case study: PsExec How ransomware may trend in 2025 What 2025 May Hold for Cybersecurity Bring Your Own Hunts to HUNTER ‘Tis the Season to Be Alert for Cyber Threats: 5 Unjoyful Holiday Tactics Collecting Useful CTI from Underground Markets Expanding source coverage: adding Signal chats to threat intelligence
Why Artificial Intelligence Can't Save Your SOC
Intel 471 · 2020-04-01 · via Intel 471 Blog

With so many security operations centers (SOCs) today struggling with analyst burnout and staffing shortages, it’s only natural that cybersecurity leaders are looking for every possible avenue to simply and affordably ease the pain. Which is why the siren call of artificial intelligence (AI) sounds so good to the ears of so many security buyers today.

Unfortunately, many security vendors today tout the miracle properties of AI-backed automation, claiming that it’s a lifesaver for understaffed SOCs. The common refrain is that AI is the answer to the cybersecurity skills gap, and the right AI engine can replace countless human analysts in the SOC.

Now, while we believe that AI and automation certainly have a limited role in helping to streamline certain tasks in the SOC, it isn’t the cavalry most people are hoping for. Like many in our industry, we’re optimistic that AI has a lot of long-term potential for cybersecurity. But we’re also realists and know that it is not nearly there yet to replace the vast, vast majority of the tasks that SOC analysts must carry out to fight off threats today.

AI ISN’T READY TO REPLACE YOUR SOC ANALYSTS

The reason that AI isn’t the complete answer to SOC worries is two-fold. First of all, the AI and machine learning modeling today isn’t nearly as sophisticated as many cybersecurity marketers will lead you to believe. In many instances they’re just an iteration or two more advanced than the rules-based signature detection mechanisms that everyone in our industry already agreed long ago were insufficient to keep up with the volume of different threats out there today.

That leads us to the second point. Even if the perfect cybersecurity AI engines did exist, they’d break down fairly quickly without human intervention to properly train that artificial brain with information about how attackers are constantly switching up their tactics, techniques and procedures (TTP). The bad guys are pretty good at gaming automated system to evade detection, and you’d better believe they’re on to our “advanced” AI detection mechanisms.

This means that somebody has got to be generating the custom threat content who knows the context in which adversaries are operating, who has dug around to find out the newest TTP being employed today, and who can teach that AI engine how it should be working. The fact is that whether a cyber detection ‘machine’ is human-powered or AI-powered, it must be fueled smart intelligence daily or it will stop running.

The best analogy we like to give is if an organization were to take the best threat hunter in the world and lock them in a room without access to outside information for the next year, they would no longer be the best threat hunter in the world by the end of that black-box experiment.

HUMAN-POWERED INTELLIGENCE IS YOUR BEST OPTION

The truth is that cutting-edge AI modeling today is best working in enterprise scenarios where there are many fewer variables at play for a machine learning system to contend with. Machine learning applications today that are excelling outside of security are in areas like speech recognition where there aren’t quite so many dynamic elements at play. A speech recognition system modeled for English may need to learn different dialects, slang, or speech patterns, but it wouldn’t be called upon to all of a sudden parse algebraic equations because the rules of the game changed midstream. But this is exactly what an AI system in the SOC is called to do. Which is why we think that the modern SOC will need to be fueled by lots of human-powered intelligence for some time to come.

To learn more about why our vote is human over AI, read our blog, Threat Hunting and You: Why Content is Critical to Threat Hunting.

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