As threat complexity increases and the boundaries of an organization have all but disappeared, security teams are more challenged than ever to deliver consistent security outcomes. One company aiming to help security teams meet this challenge is Stellar Cyber.
Stellar Cyber claims to address the needs of MSSPs by providing capabilities typically found in NG-SIEM, NDR, and SOAR products in their Open XDR platform, managed with a single license. According to Stellar Cyber, this consolidation means faster security analyst ramp time and customer onboarding with far less manually intensive tasks required. Stellar Cyber currently counts 20+ of the top MSSP providers as customers, providing security for over 3 million assets. In addition, stellar Cyber claims after deployment, users see up to 20x faster mean time to respond (MTTR), a bold claim.
We recently took a closer look at the Stellar Cyber Security Operations Platform.
Before we begin
Before digging into the platform, here are a few things MSSPs should know about Stellar Cyber:
- Works with any EDR: Stellar Cyber could be classified as an Open XDR as it delivers visibility across your customer’s environments; however, it is not an extension of an EDR product. Conversely, Stellar Cyber offers pre-built integrations to any major EDR vendors meaning your customers can use whatever EDR they want if you use Stellar Cyber.
- It’s multi-tenant: Stellar Cyber is a multi-tenant solution meaning that your customer’s data will not be commingled, enabling you to offer your services in regions specifically concerned about data privacy. Further, this multi-tenancy approach can drive better analyst-to-customer ratios. In certain situations, work done for one customer can be applied to another with zero loss of data integrity.
To facilitate this product review, the team at Stellar Cyber gave us access to the cloud-based version of their product, so after a brief product walkthrough delivered by a Stellar Cyber support person, we logged into the product.
Responding to an Incident from the Home page
This is the initial screen you see when logging into Stellar Cyber. You would expect to see many elements on the analyst home screen, such as top incidents and riskiest assets. An interesting piece on this screen is what Stellar Cyber calls the Open XDR Kill Chain. By clicking on any segment of the kill chain, you can access the threats associated with that portion of the attack chain. For example, I clicked on “Initial Attempts” to access this screen.
Here I can see these alerts with the stage “Initial Attempts” set by Stellar Cyber automatically. Further down the rabbit hole, I see more information about the alert when I click “View” on any of the alerts. Initially, I was presented with some summary graphs, then scrolling down the screen a bit, I saw a “more info” hyperlink, so I clicked it and got this in return.
Here I can read about the incident, dig into the details, and review the raw data behind this incident as well as the JSON, which I can conveniently copy to a clipboard if necessary.
Here is where I thought things got a bit more interesting. While the presentation of the data in Stellar Cyber is easy to understand and logical, the product’s true power was not evident to me until I clicked on the “Actions” button on the screen above.
As you can see, I can take my response actions right from this screen, such as “add a filter, trigger an email, or take external action. Clicking on external action, I get another picklist. When I click on Endpoint, I get a long list of options from contain host to shutdown host.
When clicking on an action, like contain host, a configuration dialog displays where I can select the connector to use, the target of the action, and any other options required to initiate the action chosen. So, in summary, I can see how security analysts, especially junior ones, will find this workflow very useful in that they can a) easily dig into the details of an incident from the home screen, b) review even more details by going deeper into the data, and c) take a remediation action from this screen without writing any scripts or tinkering with a code.
For MSSPs, I could see onboarding new analysts to work on this view initially to familiarize them with the platform while still helping meet customer service level agreements. However, my gut tells me that there is much more to learn about this Stellar Cyber platform so let’s see if there is another path to investigating incidents.
Exploring Incidents
Now instead of clicking on the Open XDR Kill Chain, I am going to click on the menu item “Incidents” and get this screen in return.
When I clicked on the carrot in the blue circle, it expanded a filtering list that enabled me to hone in on a specific type of incident. Since I am in exploratory mode, I go directly to the details button to see what I can find in this detail view.
Now I can see how this incident occurred and propagated across multiple assets. Further, I can automatically see the files, processes, users, and services associated with the incident. There are different ways to view this data as well. For example, I could switch to the timeline view to get a readable history of this incident, like below:
When I click on the small “i,” I get to a familiar screen.
I know the story from here, which is good.
So, in summary, I can see that analysts who are used to working from a list of alerts may like to start their investigations from the incidents page. For MSSPs, this view is also beneficial as it shows all incidents across all tenants in a single view. Of course, you can limit this view to analysts, customers, etc.
Threat Hunting and Response Actions in Stellar Cyber
By this time, I am convinced Stellar Cyber offers an interesting approach for MSSPs looking to streamline their security operations. Frankly, at this point in my review, I haven’t had to write any special scripts or do anything other than clicking some links and scrolling around some screens to hypothetically respond to some nasty alerts, which is not the norm for these types of products .
Before singing the praises of Stellar Cyber too highly, I wanted to take a look at a couple of other stated features, threat hunting and response actions (aka SOAR). Let’s start with threat hunting. When I click on “Threat Hunting” from the menu, I am presented with this screen.
While these stats are interesting, I am looking for actionable threat h; that’s where I see the search dialog box on the top right. I type in login and notice the stats change dynamically. Scrolling down the screen, I also see a list of alerts that has been filtered base on my search term. Here I see the familiar “more info” option, so I know where that will take me.
I also noticed something called “correlation search” under the search dialog box. When I click that, my screen changes to this.
I can load a saved query or add a new query. Clicking the add query, I see this query builder. This enables me to search essentially any data Stellar Cyber stores to theoretically find threats that went unnoticed. I can also access the threat hunting library to access previously saved queries.
You can also create response actions that will run automatically if the query you create returns any matches.
So, in summary, Stellar Cyber offers a simple threat hunting platform that doesn’t require you to build your own ELK stack or be a power scripter. For MSSPs, I can see this being a nice value add they can offer customers when emerging threats are discovered in the wild.
Conclusion
Stellar Cyber is a solid security operations platform with many features for the MSSP user. If you are in the market for a new SecOps platform, it is worth taking a look at what Stellar Cyber has to offer.
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