Blumira launches Kindling pilot, an agentic SIEM investigation engine that cuts alert volume up to 50x
What happened
Blumira Inc. introduced the pilot of Kindling, an agentic investigation engine designed to sit on top of its existing security information and event management (SIEM) platform. Kindling reduces alert volume for security teams by 30 to 50 times, targeting small to midmarket security operations centers and the managed service providers who support them.
Why it matters
Security teams often drown in noise from SIEM tools, struggling to triage alerts fast enough to catch real threats. Kindling applies agentic, or autonomous, capabilities to investigation tasks, meaning it can sift through alerts, prioritize, and provide actionable context automatically. This cuts down the workload drastically, freeing up limited security resources. For smaller teams and MSPs, this efficiency gain can prevent alert fatigue, reduce missed threats, and speed up response times, directly impacting operational effectiveness and risk exposure.
What to watch next
The pilot phase will reveal how well the agentic approach integrates with existing SOC workflows and how much it drives measurable improvements in alert triage efficiency. Success here could push Blumira to fully launch Kindling, potentially raising the bar on how automated investigations can scale for smaller security operations. Watch for early user feedback, especially on accuracy and false positive reduction, which remain crucial hurdles for agentic SIEM tools.
AI Quick Briefs Editorial Desk