I believe the future is very exciting, especially regarding the agentic approaches that have gained popularity following the rise of generative AI and large language models. We fully expect that within a year, Anvilogic will incorporate some level of agentic workflow capabilities. We might adopt these features solely within Anvilogic, or we may choose to integrate them with our own homegrown agentic workflows. This is the direction I see for Anvilogic's adoption moving forward. Anvilogic can be improved by focusing on the agentic way of doing things, similar to what we saw with Monte Copilot, which still needs work. The team is currently doing that work as seen in the roadmap, including having an agent for search, a detection agent, and a hunt agent, making those concepts come to fruition.
The hunting insight needs integrable capability with different platforms to gather all of that insight and show it on a single canvas on Anvilogic. That is the only feature that could improve the way we do operations. The pricing is slightly edging towards being a bit much for smaller organizations.
We need more around case management. I know that's something on the road map. We would like a way to create a ticket that we can export into a third-party platform like Jira. Anvilogic's prebuilt rules and threat scenarios didn't work the best for us because many of the rules were geared toward a Windows environment, whereas we're more of a Mac environment, so many of them didn't necessarily fit with what we have. I know a few other people who use them, and they've worked out well there.
Anvilogic breaks the SIEM lock-in that drives detection gaps and high costs for enterprise SOCs. It enables detection engineers and threat hunters to keep using their existing SIEM while seamlessly adopting a scalable and cost-effective data lake for high-volume data sources and advanced analytics use cases.
By eliminating the need for rip-and-replace, Anvilogic allows security leaders to confidently join the rest of the enterprise on the modern data stack without disrupting existing...
I believe the future is very exciting, especially regarding the agentic approaches that have gained popularity following the rise of generative AI and large language models. We fully expect that within a year, Anvilogic will incorporate some level of agentic workflow capabilities. We might adopt these features solely within Anvilogic, or we may choose to integrate them with our own homegrown agentic workflows. This is the direction I see for Anvilogic's adoption moving forward. Anvilogic can be improved by focusing on the agentic way of doing things, similar to what we saw with Monte Copilot, which still needs work. The team is currently doing that work as seen in the roadmap, including having an agent for search, a detection agent, and a hunt agent, making those concepts come to fruition.
The hunting insight needs integrable capability with different platforms to gather all of that insight and show it on a single canvas on Anvilogic. That is the only feature that could improve the way we do operations. The pricing is slightly edging towards being a bit much for smaller organizations.
We need more around case management. I know that's something on the road map. We would like a way to create a ticket that we can export into a third-party platform like Jira. Anvilogic's prebuilt rules and threat scenarios didn't work the best for us because many of the rules were geared toward a Windows environment, whereas we're more of a Mac environment, so many of them didn't necessarily fit with what we have. I know a few other people who use them, and they've worked out well there.