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There are numerous ways to test your SOC's detection and prevention capabilities, but not all are created equal. Each has their own strengths and weaknesses, and can be done on a different time scale.This week, we focus on arguably one of the most important - adversary emulation. In this episode we speak with Jamie Williams from the MITRE ATT&CK team about why adversary emulation is important, how it works, how you can get started regardless of the size of your team, and how to track and run an adversary emulation test.
Our guest: Jamie Williams
Jamie Williams is a Principal Adversary Emulation Engineer for the MITRE Corporation where he works on various exciting efforts involving security operations and research, specializing in adversary emulation and behavior-based detections. He also leads teams that help shape and deliver the “adversary-touch” within ATT&CK® and ATT&CK Evaluations.
Follow Jamie Williams on Twitter (@jamieantisocial) and LinkedIn (/in/jamie-williams-108369190).
Sponsor's Note
Support for the Blueprint podcast comes from the SANS Institute.
Since the debut of SEC450, we’ve always had students interested in a matching course covering the management and leadership aspects of running a SOC. If you like the topics in this podcast and would like to learn more about Blue Team leadership and management, check out the new MGT551: Building and Leading Security Operations Centers. This new course is designed for Security Team leaders looking to build, grow and operate a security operation center with peak efficiency. It’s a hands-on technical leadership course, that takes you through everything from scoping threat groups to use case creation, threat hunting, planning, SOC maturity and detection assessment and much much more.
Check out the course syllabus, labs and a free demo at sansurl.com/551
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