Unified Cybersecurity Modeling
Unified cybersecurity modeling brings together the many moving parts of cybersecurity—assets, threats, vulnerabilities, controls, behaviors, and relationships
Unified Cybersecurity Modeling
It addresses a core problem in cybersecurity: most organizations use fragmented tools, frameworks, and data sources that don’t “speak the same language,” making it difficult to see the full threat landscape.
Two Major Directions
1. Unified Linkage Models
These models connect assets, threats, controls, and events in a non‑linear way.
2. Unified Ontologies
Shared vocabulary (MITRE, CVE, UCO) allowing tools to interoperate.
Single, Consistent Representation
Of Cybersecurity Data
Impact Analysis
Challenges Without UCM
- Fragmented data sources
- Inconsistent terminology
- Slow manual investigations
- Limited automation
- Lack of holistic visibility
Solutions With UCM
- Faster threat detection
- Better correlation across tools
- More accurate risk assessments
- Stronger AI-driven automation
- Improved SOC efficiency
TDIR Integration Output
Single Source of Truth
Consistent Semantics
Better Automation
Used in: SIEM • XDR • SOAR
Where Organizations Use UCM
- Security Operations Centers
- Threat Intelligence Platforms
- XDR & SIEM Systems
- Risk & Compliance
- Incident Response Automation
- Cyber Knowledge Graphs
- Attack Surface Management
- Management & Risk Analytics
Universal Management Platform
A management and risk analytics platform, in a universal and vendor neutral sense, is a system that brings together data, analytics, and decision support tools to help organizations understand their exposures, manage operations, and make informed strategic choices. It is not tied to finance alone—similar platforms exist in cybersecurity, supply chain management, operations, and enterprise risk.