Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Managed SOC Services: Your 2026 Selection Guide

The managed security services market is projected to reach US$ 87.9 Billion by 2033, up from US$ 41.3 Billion in 2026 at an 11.4% CAGR according to Persistence Market Research. That number matters because it reframes managed SOC services from a niche outsourcing decision into a mainstream operating model for security teams that can't afford blind spots, delayed response, or constant hiring battles.

Detection Engineering: Build Robust Programs & Best

Your SOC probably already has detections. The problem is that many of them don't behave like a managed security capability. They behave like a pile of alerts. Analysts close noisy rules because they have to protect their queue. Engineers keep adding logic because coverage gaps are real. Leaders ask whether the program is improving, and the usual answers are weak. Alert counts go up. Tuning tickets pile up.

NIST 800-53 Controls: Master Implementation in 2026

You're probably in one of two situations right now. Either an auditor has asked for proof that your controls operate, or your SOC is collecting plenty of telemetry but nobody can cleanly map that activity back to NIST 800-53 controls. Both problems usually come from the same gap. The framework lives in policy binders, while the evidence lives in scattered tools. That gap gets painful fast in FedRAMP, CMMC-aligned, and other regulated environments.

DNS Log File Your Guide to Uncovering Hidden Threats

Your firewall says nothing is wrong. Your EDR has a few low-confidence alerts. Users aren't reporting outages. But something still feels off. That's the exact situation where a DNS log file stops being “just another log” and turns into one of the most useful artifacts in the environment. Attackers lean on DNS because every network depends on it, it is often treated as background noise, and suspicious lookups can blend into legitimate traffic for a long time.

Mastering Data Exfiltration Prevention in 2026

A lot of security programs still treat data exfiltration as a downstream consequence of compromise. That framing is too narrow. The global average cost of a breach reached $4.44 million in 2025 according to Varonis's summary of 2025 data breach statistics, and that cost lands on operations, legal, compliance, and executive credibility, not just the SOC.