Security teams today are not failing because they lack tools. Most organizations already have firewalls, EDR, SIEM, cloud monitoring, and multiple detection layers. Yet attackers still manage to enter networks, stay hidden, and move laterally before detection. That gap between entry and detection is the real challenge.
This creates pressure for CISOs and SOC leaders. Analysts deal with alert fatigue, unclear signals, and limited time. When alerts are uncertain, response slows. And when response slows, business risk increases. Security teams want clearer signals, earlier detection, and measurable cyber deception ROI — not just more alerts.
This is where cyber deception and network detection strategies are gaining attention. Platforms like Fidelis Network Deception combine deception technology with network detection visibility so teams can expose attackers earlier, integrate insights into existing workflows, and make security operations more efficient.
