Build a Modern Microsoft SOC Using Microsoft 365 Security Stack.

Discover how to build a modern Security Operations Center using Microsoft 365 security tools. Learn how Defender, Sentinel, and identity protection work together to detect cyber threats, automate responses, and strengthen enterprise security operations.

#MicrosoftSOC #Microsoft365Security #MicrosoftDefenderSOC #SecurityOperationsCenter #MicrosoftSentinelSOC

https://star-knowledge.com/blog/microsoft-soc-using-microsoft-365-security-stack/

Microsoft SOC with Microsoft 365: Modern Security Stack Guide

Learn how to build a Microsoft SOC with Microsoft 365 using Defender XDR, Sentinel, and Entra to improve threat detection, monitoring, and response.

This Punchbowl Phish Is Bypassing 90% Of Email Filters Right Now

997 words, 5 minutes read time.

If you have had three different analysts escalate the exact same email in your ticketing system in the last 72 hours, this one is for you.

This is not a Nigerian prince scam. This is not a fake Amazon order. This is right now, this week, the most successful, most widely distributed phishing campaign running on the internet. And almost nobody is talking about just how good it is.

What this scam actually is

You get an email. It looks exactly like an invitation from Punchbowl, the extremely popular digital invite and greeting card service. There’s no misspelled logo. There’s no broken grammar. There is absolutely nothing that jumps out as fake.

It says someone has invited you to a birthday party, a baby shower, a retirement. At the very bottom, there is one single line that almost everyone misses:

For the best experience, please view this invitation on a desktop or laptop computer.

If you click the link, you do not get an invitation. You get malware. As of this week, the payload is almost always a variant of Remcos RAT, which gives attackers full unrestricted access to your device, full keylogging, and the ability to dump all credentials and move laterally across your network.

And every single mainstream warning about this scam has completely missed the most important detail. That line about the desktop? That is not a throwaway line. That is deliberate, extremely well researched threat actor tradecraft.

Nearly all modern mobile email clients automatically rewrite and sandbox links. Most endpoint protection does almost nothing on desktop by comparison. The attackers know this. They are actively telling you to defeat your own security for them. And it works.

Why this is an absolute nightmare for security teams

Let me give you the numbers that no one is putting in the official advisories:

  • As of April 2025, this campaign has a 91% delivery rate against Microsoft 365 E5. The absolute top tier enterprise email filter is stopping less than 1 in 10 of these.
  • Most lure domains are less than 12 hours old when they are first used, so they do not appear on any commercial threat feed.
  • This is not just targeting consumers. The campaign is now actively being sent to corporate inboxes, targeted at HR, finance and IT teams.
  • Proofpoint reported earlier this week that this campaign currently has a 12% click rate. For context, the average phish has a click rate of 0.8%.

I have seen CISOs, SOC managers and professional penetration testers all admit publicly this week that they almost clicked this link. If you look at this and don’t feel even the tiniest urge to click, you are lying to yourself.

This is what good phishing looks like. This is not the garbage you send out in your monthly phishing simulation with the obviously fake logo. This is the stuff that actually works.

How to not get burned

I’m going to split this into two sections: the advice for end users, and the actionable stuff you can implement as a security professional in the next 10 minutes.

For everyone

  • Real Punchbowl invites will only ever come from an address ending in @punchbowl.com. There are no exceptions. If it comes from anywhere else, delete it immediately.
  • Any email, from any service, that tells you to open it on a specific device is a scam. Full stop. There is no legitimate service on the internet that cares what device you use to open an invitation. This is now the single most reliable red flag for active phishing campaigns.
  • Do not go to Punchbowl’s website to “check if the invite is real”. If someone actually invited you to something, they will text you to ask if you got it.

For SOC Analysts and Security Teams

These are the steps you can go and implement right now before you finish reading this post:

  • Add an email detection rule for the exact string for the best experience please view this on a desktop or laptop. At time of writing this rule has a 0% false positive rate.
  • Temporarily increase the reputation score for all newly registered domains for the next 14 days.
  • Add this exact lure to your phishing simulation program immediately. This is now the single best baseline test of how effective your user training actually is.
  • If you get any reports of this being clicked, assume full device compromise immediately. Do not waste time triaging. Isolate the host.
  • Closing Thought

    The worst part about this scam is how predictable it is. We have all been talking for 15 years about how the next big phish won’t have spelling mistakes. We all said it will look perfect. It will be something you actually expect. And now it’s here, and it is running circles around almost every security stack we have built.

    If you see this email, report it. If you are on shift right now, go push that detection rule. And for the love of god, stop laughing at people who almost clicked it.

    Call to Action

    If this breakdown helped you think a little clearer about the threats out there, don’t just click away. Subscribe for more no-nonsense security insights, drop a comment with your thoughts or questions, or reach out if there’s a topic you want me to tackle next. Stay sharp out there.

    D. Bryan King

    Sources

    Disclaimer:

    The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

    #attackVector #boardroomRisk #breachPrevention #CISAAlert #CISO #credentialTheft #cyberResilience #cyberattack #cybercrime #cybersecurityAwareness #defenseInDepth #desktopOnlyPhishing #detectionRule #DKIM #DMARC #emailFilterBypass #emailGateway #emailHygiene #emailSecurity #emailSecurityGateway #endpointProtection #incidentResponse #indicatorsOfCompromise #initialAccess #IoCs #lateralMovement #linkSafety #logAnalysis #maliciousLink #malware #MITREATTCK #mobileEmailRisk #phishingCampaign #phishingDetection #phishingScam #phishingSimulation #phishingStatistics #PunchbowlPhishing #ransomwarePrecursor #RemcosRAT #sandboxEvasion #securityAlert #SecurityAwarenessTraining #securityBestPractices #securityLeadership #securityMonitoring #securityOperationsCenter #securityStack #SOCAnalyst #socialEngineering #spearPhishing #SPF #suspiciousEmail #T1566001 #threatActor #threatHunting #threatIntelligence #userTraining #zeroTrust

    The Brutal Truth About “Trusted” Phishing: Why Even Apple Emails Are Burning Your SOC

    1,158 words, 6 minutes read time.

    I’ve been in this field long enough to recognize a pattern that keeps repeating, no matter how much tooling we buy or how many frameworks we cite. Every major incident, every ugly postmortem, every late-night bridge call starts the same way: someone trusted something they were conditioned to trust. Not a zero-day, not a nation-state exploit chain, not some mythical hacker genius—just a moment where a human followed a path that looked legitimate because the system trained them to do exactly that. We like to frame cybersecurity as a technical discipline because that makes it feel controllable, but the truth is that most real-world compromises are social engineering campaigns wearing technical clothing. The Apple phishing scam circulating right now is a perfect example, and if you dismiss it as “just another phishing email,” you’re missing the point entirely.

    Here’s what makes this particular scam dangerous, and frankly impressive from an adversarial perspective. The victim receives a text message warning that someone is trying to access their Apple account. Immediately, the attacker injects urgency, because urgency shuts down analysis faster than any exploit ever could. Then comes a phone call from someone claiming to be Apple Support, speaking confidently, calmly, and procedurally. They explain that a support ticket has been opened to protect the account, and shortly afterward, the victim receives a real, legitimate email from Apple with an actual case number. No spoofed domain, no broken English, no obvious red flags. At that moment, every instinct we’ve trained users to rely on fires in the wrong direction. The email is real. The ticket is real. The process is real. The only thing that isn’t real is the person on the other end of the line. When the attacker asks for a one-time security code to “close the ticket,” the victim believes they’re completing a security process, not destroying it. That single moment hands the attacker the keys to the account, cleanly and quietly, with no malware and almost no telemetry.

    What makes this work so consistently is that attackers have finally accepted what many defenders still resist admitting: humans are the primary attack surface, and trust is the most valuable credential in the environment. This isn’t phishing in the classic sense of fake emails and bad links. This is confidence exploitation, the same psychological technique that underpins MFA fatigue attacks, helpdesk impersonation, OAuth consent abuse, and supply-chain compromise. The attacker doesn’t need to bypass controls when they can persuade the user to carry them around those controls and hold the door open. In that sense, this scam isn’t new at all. It’s the same strategy that enabled SolarWinds to unfold quietly over months, the same abuse of implicit trust that allowed NotPetya to detonate across global networks, and the same manipulation of expected behavior that made Stuxnet possible. Different scale, different impact, same foundational weakness.

    From a framework perspective, this attack maps cleanly to MITRE ATT&CK, and that matters because frameworks are how we translate gut instinct into organizational understanding. Initial access occurs through phishing, but the real win for the attacker comes from harvesting authentication material and abusing valid accounts. Once they’re in, everything they do looks legitimate because it is legitimate. Logs show successful authentication, not intrusion. Alerts don’t fire because controls are doing exactly what they were designed to do. This is where Defense in Depth quietly collapses, not because the layers are weak, but because they are aligned around assumptions that no longer hold. We assume that legitimate communications can be trusted, that MFA equals security, that awareness training creates resilience. In reality, these assumptions create predictable paths that adversaries now exploit deliberately.

    If you’ve ever worked in a SOC, you already know why this type of attack gets missed. Analysts are buried in alerts, understaffed, and measured on response time rather than depth of understanding. A real Apple email doesn’t trip a phishing filter. A user handing over a code doesn’t generate an endpoint alert. There’s no malicious attachment, no beaconing traffic, no exploit chain to reconstruct. By the time anything unusual appears in the logs, the attacker is already authenticated and blending into normal activity. At that point, the investigation starts from a place of disadvantage, because you’re hunting something that looks like business as usual. This is how attackers win without ever making noise.

    The uncomfortable truth is that most organizations are still defending against yesterday’s threats with yesterday’s mental models. We talk about Zero Trust, but we still trust brands, processes, and authority figures implicitly. We talk about resilience, but we train users to comply rather than to challenge. We talk about human risk, but we treat training as a checkbox instead of a behavioral discipline. If you’re a practitioner, the takeaway here isn’t to panic or to blame users. It’s to recognize that trust itself must be treated as a controlled resource. Verification cannot stop at the domain name or the sender address. Processes that allow external actors to initiate internal trust workflows must be scrutinized just as aggressively as exposed services. And security teams need to start modeling social engineering as an adversarial tradecraft, not an awareness problem.

    For SOC analysts, that means learning to question “legitimate” activity when context doesn’t line up, even if the artifacts themselves are clean. For incident responders, it means expanding investigations beyond malware and into identity, access patterns, and user interaction timelines. For architects, it means designing systems that minimize the blast radius of human error rather than assuming it won’t happen. And for CISOs, it means being honest with boards about where real risk lives, even when that conversation is uncomfortable. The enemy is no longer just outside the walls. Sometimes, the gate opens because we taught it how.

    I’ve said this before, and I’ll keep saying it until it sinks in: trust is not a security control. It’s a vulnerability that must be managed deliberately. Attackers understand this now better than we do, and until we catch up, they’ll keep walking through doors we swear are locked.

    Call to Action

    If this breakdown helped you think a little clearer about the threats out there, don’t just click away. Subscribe for more no-nonsense security insights, drop a comment with your thoughts or questions, or reach out if there’s a topic you want me to tackle next. Stay sharp out there.

    D. Bryan King

    Sources

    MITRE ATT&CK Framework
    NIST Cybersecurity Framework
    CISA – Avoiding Social Engineering and Phishing Attacks
    Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report
    Mandiant Threat Intelligence Reports
    CrowdStrike Global Threat Report
    Krebs on Security
    Schneier on Security
    Black Hat Conference Whitepapers
    DEF CON Conference Archives
    Microsoft Security Blog
    Apple Platform Security

    Disclaimer:

    The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

    #accountTakeover #adversaryTradecraft #ApplePhishingScam #attackSurfaceManagement #authenticationSecurity #breachAnalysis #breachPrevention #businessEmailCompromise #CISOStrategy #cloudSecurityRisks #credentialHarvesting #cyberDefenseStrategy #cyberIncidentAnalysis #cyberResilience #cyberRiskManagement #cybercrimeTactics #cybersecurityAwareness #defenseInDepth #digitalIdentityRisk #digitalTrustExploitation #enterpriseRisk #enterpriseSecurity #humanAttackSurface #identityAndAccessManagement #identitySecurity #incidentResponse #informationSecurity #MFAFatigue #MITREATTCK #modernPhishing #NISTFramework #phishingAttacks #phishingPrevention #securityArchitecture #SecurityAwarenessTraining #securityCulture #securityLeadership #securityOperationsCenter #securityTrainingFailures #SOCAnalyst #socialEngineering #threatActorPsychology #threatHunting #trustedBrandAbuse #trustedPhishing #userBehaviorRisk #zeroTrustSecurity

    Inside SOC: Triage Smarter, Not Harder w/ Tom DeJong : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-vPjP69qgU

    #securityoperationsCenter #alert #triage

    Inside SOC: Triage Smarter, Not Harder w/ Tom DeJong

    YouTube

    SOC as a Service (SOCaaS): A Smarter Way to Secure Your Business in 2025

    Discover why SOC as a Service is the smarter security choice for 2025. Explore benefits, pricing, features, and how SOCaaS strengthens business cybersecurity.

    👉 Read more: https://www.ecsinfotech.com/soc-as-a-service-socaas-smarter-way-to-secure-your-business/

    #SOCasaService #SOCaaS #SOCService #CyberSecurity #SecurityOperationsCenter #ManagedSecurity #BusinessSecurity #ThreatDetection #DataProtection #ITSecurity #ECSInfotech #ECS

    Zobacz jak polować na włamywaczy i na czym polega obsługa incydentów w SOC

    W piątek 17 września, o godzinie 19:00 robimy lajwa pt. “Jak naprawdę wygląda praca w SOC“. Zapisać może się każdy, wystarczy kliknąć na poniższy przycisk:

    Zapisz się, nawet jeśli ten termin Ci nie pasuje, bo każdy kto się zapisze, otrzyma od nas wieczysty dostęp do nagrania po zakończeniu transmisji. Możesz też otrzymać certyfikat potwierdzający udział.
    Threat hunting, w ramach którego poluje się na cyberprzestępców, to bardzo ciekawa praca. Właśnie tym zajmują się pracownicy tzw. SOC-ów (ang. Security Operations Center). Na lajwie pokażemy z jakich narzędzi korzystają, aby wykrywać zagrożenia i obsługiwać incydenty w małych i dużych firmach. Część z tej wiedzy przyda Ci się nie tylko w firmie — możesz ją wykorzystać do ochrony domowej sieci. A jeśli przeszło Ci przez myśl, żeby zmienić pracę i dołączyć do zespołu SOC w jakiejś firmie (albo dopiero zaczynasz swoją karierę w IT), to już w ogóle nasz piątkowy LIVE będzie dla Ciebie idealnym drogowskazem, jak to zrobić i na co uważać.
    Co dokładnie pokażemy?
    W trakcie spotkania zobaczysz 2 demonstracje:

    ‍ Jak wyglada analiza przykładowego incydentu?
    ‍ Jak wygląda przykładowy Threat Hunting

    A oprócz tego pokażemy też:

    narzędzia używane w profesjonalnych SOC-ach wraz ze szczerym omówieniem wad i zalet (Splunk, Wazuh, Elastic, MITRE, OpenCTI, MISP),
    różne stanowiska w SOC-ach oraz to, co powinieneś umieć, aby rozpocząć na nich pracę,
    jak zbudować domowy SOC,
    gdzie w SOC-ach jest miejsce dla AI i agentów,

    Będzie też sekcja Q&A z Michałem Garcarzem, który ma 30 lat doświadczenia w obszarze cyberbezpieczeństwa, a od ponad 10 lat buduje i nadzoruje różne SOC. [...]

    #Elastic #MichałGarcarz #MISP #MITRE #OpenCTI #Praca #SecurityOperationsCenter #SOC #Splunk #Wazuh

    https://niebezpiecznik.pl/post/zobacz-jak-polowac-na-wlamywaczy-i-na-czym-polega-obsluga-incydentow-w-soc/

    Zobacz jak polować na włamywaczy i na czym polega obsługa incydentów w SOC

    NieBezpiecznik.pl

    DXC i 7AI wprowadzają autonomicznych agentów AI do cyberbezpieczeństwa. Koniec z ręczną analizą alertów?

    DXC Technology, globalny dostawca usług IT, oraz firma 7AI, specjalizująca się w tzw. agentach AI, ogłosiły strategiczne partnerstwo.

    Jego owocem jest nowa usługa DXC Agentic Security Operations Center (SOC), która wykorzystuje autonomiczne, inteligentne boty do wykrywania, analizy i neutralizowania cyberzagrożeń. Rozwiązanie ma skrócić czas reakcji, obniżyć koszty i zwiększyć skalę ochrony firm.

    Nowo utworzone centrum bezpieczeństwa odchodzi od tradycyjnego modelu, w którym analitycy ręcznie przetwarzają alerty. Zamiast tego, zadania te przejmują inteligentni agenci AI, którzy samodzielnie analizują potencjalne zagrożenia i reagują na incydenty. Jak zapowiada Maciej Tomczyk, dyrektor zarządzający DXC Technology Poland, usługa będzie dostępna dla klientów na całym świecie, w tym również w Polsce, oferując „większą szybkość działania, sprawniejsze wykrywanie i reagowanie na incydenty bezpieczeństwa”.

    Już ponad połowa firm korzysta z agentów AI. Raport Google Cloud pokazuje, gdzie zwrot z inwestycji jest największy

    Kluczem do działania platformy jest innowacyjna technologia „Dynamic Reasoning” opracowana przez 7AI. Pozwala ona autonomicznym agentom ustalać w czasie rzeczywistym, jak badać nowe, nawet wcześniej nieznane zagrożenia, bez potrzeby korzystania z gotowych scenariuszy. Dzięki temu DXC Agentic SOC eliminuje opóźnienia związane z ręczną obsługą, skracając czas potrzebny na zbadanie zagrożenia – który dotychczas wynosił od 30 minut do 2,5 godziny – i redukując liczbę fałszywych alarmów.

    Partnerstwo opiera się na synergii obu firm. DXC wnosi swoją globalną skalę działania, w tym obsługę setek klientów i przetwarzanie 4,5 miliona zagrożeń dziennie, co tworzy ogromne środowisko danych do trenowania AI. 7AI dostarcza natomiast swoją przełomową platformę. Według danych 7AI, jej technologia pomogła już zaoszczędzić klientom ponad 224 000 godzin pracy analityków, co przekłada się na ponad 11,2 mln dolarów odzyskanej produktywności. Prognozy na rok 2025 zakładają oszczędności przekraczające 100 milionów dolarów.

    Cisco udostępnia otwarty model AI dla cyberbezpieczeństwa. Ma być skuteczniejszy niż ChatGPT

    #7AI #agenciAI #AI #automatyzacja #cyberbezpieczeństwo #DXCTechnology #news #ochronaDanych #SecurityOperationsCenter #SoC #sztucznaInteligencja

    📬 Cybercrime schläft nie – wie das SOC Bedrohungen stoppt, bevor Sie davon erfahren
    #Advertorial #ITSicherheit #FalsePositive #LEITWERKAG #SecurityOperationsCenter #SIEMSystem #SOARTechnologie #SoC https://sc.tarnkappe.info/a32925
    Cybercrime schläft nie – wie das SOC Bedrohungen stoppt, bevor Sie davon erfahren

    Cybercrime schläft nie – wie das Security Operations Center Bedrohungen stoppt, bevor Sie davon erfahren. Hier stellen wir das SOC vor.

    TARNKAPPE.INFO

    AI co-pilots like Microsoft Security Copilot are here to reshape how security operations centers handle scale, speed, and complexity. Used well, they cut time-to-meaning, reduce analyst fatigue, and surface higher-value investigations for humans to resolve. Used poorly, they can amplify bias, create automation blind spots, and erode trust.

    My blog post will enlighten the topic with some concrete tips.

    https://vasenius.fi/empowering-soc-analysts-human-ai-co-teaming-strategies-with-security-copilot/

    #SecurityOperationsCenter #SecurityCopilot #MicrosoftSecurity

    Empowering SOC Analysts: Human - AI Co-Teaming Strategies with Security Copilot - The Security Everywhere

    A practical, human take for SOCs on blending analyst judgment with AI speed – without tripping over privacy, governance, or […]

    The Security Everywhere