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Devo Delivers Complete Data Control to Security Teams with the Launch of Data Orchestration

Devo

Devo Technology, the security data analytics company, is launching data orchestration, a data analytics cloud, and security operations center (SOC) workflow enhancements, offering security teams data control, cost optimizations, and efficient automation.

Security teams are grappling with the vast amounts of data they need to manage and analyze, as many traditional SIEMs do not cost-efficiently ingest data from any source. With the launch of Devo’s new data orchestration and data analytics cloud, organizations aren’t forced to omit data sources because it’s too expensive. Devo’s SOC workflow enhancements also enable analysts to easily act on that data with AI-driven automation for precise threat detection and incident response.

“No organization should have to forgo security because of high vendor costs that balloon with scale,” said Rakesh Nair, SVP of product and engineering at Devo. “While there have been many changes in the SIEM market, we’ve remained unwaveringly focused on enabling our customers to maintain control while providing them with the flexibility they need to meet their unique SOC needs. Built on the principles of agnostic data support, we empower security teams to analyze and act—fast.”

Also Read: Grid Dynamics Introduces AI-Powered Data Observability Starter Kit, Extending Its Analytics Platform Offering 

Devo integrates data orchestration into the ingest pipeline for cost efficiency

Devo Data Orchestration gives companies total control of their data so they can manage and analyze it from any source—at scale and on their terms. It filters and routes data to destinations such as Amazon S3, Databricks, Snowflake, and others to ensure the most valuable data is available for real-time analytics and alerting, while optimizing where less valuable data is stored. This gives enterprises and managed security service providers (MSSPs) the flexibility to manage costs while scaling to meet growing data volumes.

“The exponential expansion of the attack surface is leading many security teams to make hard decisions about what data sources they do and don’t ingest. However, this can introduce blind spots, leaving them vulnerable to cyberattacks,” said Michelle Abraham, research director, security and trust, IDC. “Having data orchestration capabilities embedded directly within a SIEM is very attractive, as many organizations seek this functionality to reduce data costs while continuing to scale.”

SOURCE: GlobeNewswire