Investigate alerts in Microsoft 365 Defender
Note
Want to experience Microsoft 365 Defender? Learn more about how you can evaluate and pilot Microsoft 365 Defender.
Applies to:
- Microsoft 365 Defender
Note
This article describes security alerts in Microsoft 365 Defender. However, you can use activity alerts to send email notifications to yourself or other admins when users perform specific activities in Microsoft 365. For more information, see Create activity alerts - Microsoft Purview | Microsoft Docs.
Alerts are the basis of all incidents and indicate the occurrence of malicious or suspicious events in your environment. Alerts are typically part of a broader attack and provide clues about an incident.
In Microsoft 365 Defender, related alerts are aggregated together to form incidents. Incidents will always provide the broader context of an attack, however, analyzing alerts can be valuable when deeper analysis is required.
The Alerts queue shows the current set of alerts. You get to the alerts queue from Incidents & alerts > Alerts on the quick launch of the Microsoft 365 Defender portal.
Alerts from different Microsoft security solutions like Microsoft Defender for Endpoint, Microsoft Defender for Office 365, and Microsoft 365 Defender appear here.
By default, the alerts queue in the Microsoft 365 Defender portal displays the new and in progress alerts from the last 30 days. The most recent alert is at the top of the list so you can see it first.
From the default alerts queue, you can select Filter to see a Filter pane, from which you can specify a subset of the alerts. Here's an example.
You can filter alerts according to these criteria:
- Severity
- Status
- Service sources
- Entities (the impacted assets)
- Automated investigation state
Required roles for Defender for Office 365 alerts
You'll need to have any of the following roles to access Microsoft Defender for Office 365 alerts:
For Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) global roles:
Global administrator
Security administrator
Security Operator
Global Reader
Security Reader
Office 365 Security & Compliance Role Groups
Compliance Administrator
Organization Management
Analyze an alert
To see the main alert page, select the name of the alert. Here's an example.
You can also select the Open the main alert page action from the Manage alert pane.
An alert page is composed of these sections:
- Alert story, which is the chain of events and alerts related to this alert in chronological order
- Summary details
Throughout an alert page, you can select the ellipses (...) beside any entity to see available actions, such as linking the alert to another incident. The list of available actions depends on the type of alert.
Alert sources
Microsoft 365 Defender alerts may come from solutions like Microsoft Defender for Endpoint, Microsoft Defender for Office 365, Microsoft Defender for Cloud Apps, and the app governance add-on for Microsoft Defender for Cloud Apps. You may notice alerts with prepended characters in the alert. The following table provides guidance to help you understand the mapping of alert sources based on the prepended character on the alert.
Note
- The prepended GUIDs are specific only to unified experiences such as unified alerts queue, unified alerts page, unified investigation, and unified incident.
- The prepended character does not change the GUID of the alert. The only change to the GUID is the prepended component.
| Alert source | Prepended character |
|---|---|
| Microsoft Defender for Office 365 | fa{GUID} Example: fa123a456b-c789-1d2e-12f1g33h445h6i |
| Microsoft Defender for Endpoint | da or ed for custom detection alerts |
| Microsoft Defender for Identity | aa{GUID} Example: aa123a456b-c789-1d2e-12f1g33h445h6i |
| Microsoft Defender for Cloud Apps | ca{GUID} Example: ca123a456b-c789-1d2e-12f1g33h445h6i |
Analyze affected assets
The Actions taken section has a list of impacted assets, such as mailboxes, devices, and users affected by this alert.
You can also select View in action center to view the History tab of the Action center in the Microsoft 365 Defender portal.
Trace an alert's role in the alert story
The alert story displays all assets or entities related to the alert in a process tree view. The alert in the title is the one in focus when you first land on your selected alert's page. Assets in the alert story are expandable and clickable. They provide additional information and expedite your response by allowing you to take action right in the context of the alert page.
Note
The alert story section may contain more than one alert, with additional alerts related to the same execution tree appearing before or after the alert you've selected.
View more alert information on the details page
The details page shows the details of the selected alert, with details and actions related to it. If you select any of the affected assets or entities in the alert story, the details page changes to provide contextual information and actions for the selected object.
Once you've selected an entity of interest, the details page changes to display information about the selected entity type, historic information when it's available, and options to take action on this entity directly from the alert page.
Manage alerts
To manage an alert, select Manage alert in the summary details section of the alert page. For a single alert, here's an example of the Manage alert pane.
The Manage alert pane allows you to view or specify:
The alert status (New, Resolved, In progress).
The user account that has been assigned the alert.
The alert's classification:
Not set (the default).
True positive with a type of threat. Use this classification for alerts that accurately indicate a real threat. Specifying the threat type helps your security team see threat patterns and act to defend your organization from them.
Informational, expected activity with a type of activity. Use the options in this category to classify alerts for security tests, red team activity, and expected unusual behavior from trusted apps and users.
False positive for types of alerts that were created even when there is no malicious activity. Classifying alerts as false positive helps Microsoft 365 Defender improve its detection quality.
A comment on the alert.
Note
One way of managing alerts it through the use of tags. The tagging capability for Microsoft Defender for Office 365 is incrementally being rolled out and is currently in preview.
Currently, modified tag names are only applied to alerts created after the update. Alerts that were generated before the modification will not reflect the updated tag name.
To manage a set of alerts similar to a specific alert, select View similar alerts in the INSIGHT box in the summary details section of the alert page.
From the Manage alerts pane, you can then classify all of the related alerts at the same time. Here's an example.
If similar alerts were already classified in the past, you can save time by using Microsoft 365 Defender recommendations to learn how the other alerts were resolved. From the summary details section, select Recommendations.
The Recommendations tab provides next-step actions and advice for investigation, remediation, and prevention. Here's an example.
Resolve an alert
Once you're done analyzing an alert and it can be resolved, go to the Manage alert pane for the alert or similar alerts and mark the status as Resolved and then classify it as a True positive with a type of threat, an Informational, expected activity with a type of activity, or a False positive.
Classifying alerts helps Microsoft 365 Defender improve its detection quality.
Use Power Automate to triage alerts
Modern security operations (SecOps) teams need automation to work effectively. To focus on hunting and investigating real threats, SecOps teams use Power Automate to triage through the list of alerts and eliminate the ones that aren't threats.
Criteria for resolving alerts
User has Out-of-office message turned on
User isn't tagged as high risk
If both are true, SecOps marks the alert as legitimate travel and resolves it. A notification is posted in Microsoft Teams after the alert is resolved.
Connect Power Automate to Microsoft Defender for Cloud Apps
To create the automation, you'll need an API token before you can connect Power Automate to Microsoft Defender for Cloud Apps.
Click Settings, select Security extensions, and then click Add token in the API tokens tab.
Provide a name for your token, and then click Generate. Save the token as you'll need it later.
Create an automated flow
Watch this short video to learn how automation works efficiently to create a smooth workflow and how to connect Power Automate to Defender for Cloud Apps.
Next steps
As needed for in-process incidents, continue your investigation.
See also
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