With Cases, security teams can collaborate on security incidents to manage anomalies and effect remediation. Security automation and orchestration platform Tines has added a new case management capability, dubbed Cases, to allow security teams to collaborate on security incidents.This collaboration feature is aimed at enabling the teams to efficiently handle anomalies, automation, and remediations.“With Cases, Tines users — which range from startups to Fortune 10 — can deploy a new capability that addresses the critical flaws in existing case management solutions, from a lack of customizations and integrations to complex interfaces that lead to mistakes and delays,” said Eoin Hinchy, founder of Tines.Cases is an add-on to the Tines platform and is available to all its customers at launch on a free-trial basis. After 45 days of free usage, customers will be prompted to buy the Cases subscription. Cases are created from user-defined recordsCases features a “team collaboration and remediation” capability, which enables each member of the team to view the status of incidents and actions taken by colleagues, collaborate and resolve issues effectively. This is done through “cases” created from user-defined “records” that monitor metadata across story runs within a team.“Cases helps security and IT teams to manage and track incidents, investigate security breaches, and manage response activities,” Hinchy said. “Anyone on the team can understand Cases quickly, and our new solution complements the existing platform by surfacing opportunities to optimize existing workflows or introduce new ones.” Within the platform, teams will have the option to create new workflows and collaborate on anomalies and build improved automation.“We are definitely seeing a trend toward extending and expanding case management capabilities, especially as applications embrace new technologies and new methods of collaboration emerge,” said Eric Newcomer, an analyst at Intellyx. “Adding case management to Tines’ no code security software will definitely improve the ability of its customers to more quickly respond to these growing security challenges.”Cases builds on Tines’ no-code modelAn average security team receives “10,000 alerts every single day and it’s simply no longer possible for humans to respond to all of them,” Hinchy pointed out. Tines’ platform features a no-code dashboard enabling security teams to automate vulnerability discovery and repair before exploits.“At Tines, we’re dedicated to empowering security teams to do their best work by delivering powerful no-code automation into the hands of those already doing the work manually.” Hinchy said. “Our customers can build complex, deep workflows — such as phishing attack response, suspicious logins, or threat enrichment — in minutes instead of days or weeks on their previous solutions.”Existing case management solutions, Tines claimed, lack customization for workflows and fields, impacting the ability to tailor the tool to specific needs. Complex interfaces also lead to mistakes and delays. Tines is attempting to fix that with Cases’ customizable user interface, providing visibility across user permissions and trend analysis across workflows.“For customization, Cases is built on top of another feature in Tines: Records. Automation running at scale encounters and produces huge volumes of data. Records, in Tines, allow teams to normalize this data, storing reduced, highly-indexed views of it – in a fully customizable manner,” Hinchy said. Cases can also be incorporated in places outside Tines’ platform with built-in APIs, Hinchy added. Related content brandpost Shifting security left: DevSecOps meets virtualization By Anthony Ricco, CMO of Corellium. 01 Jul 2023 4 mins Security news analysis Attackers add hacked servers to commercial proxy networks for profit Proxyjacking allows attackers to sell unknowing victims' unused network bandwidth. By Lucian Constantin 30 Jun 2023 4 mins Cybercrime news Command-and-control framework PhonyC2 attributed to Iran’s Muddywater group PhonyC2 was used to exploit the log4j vulnerability in the Israeli software SysAid, the attack against Israel’s Technion institute, and the ongoing attack against the PaperCut print management software. By Apurva Venkat 30 Jun 2023 4 mins Advanced Persistent Threats Cyberattacks Vulnerabilities news First state-sponsored cyberattack against UK government revealed two decades later Rare insight marks the 20th anniversary of a state-backed malware attack on a UK government department. By Michael Hill 30 Jun 2023 3 mins Cyberattacks Government Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe