Commvault has expanded its partnership with CrowdStrike, introducing bi-directional integration between Commvault Cloud and CrowdStrike Falcon Next-Gen SIEM to tighten coordination between detection and data recovery.
The integration is designed to help organisations verify the integrity of backup data more quickly during incidents, reducing the risk of restoring compromised files and accelerating recovery decisions.
Modern attackers are increasingly able to move laterally across environments, making detection alone insufficient. Enterprises must also ensure their recovery points are clean and trustworthy.
The new capability delivers Commvault’s AI-powered anomaly detection, threat scanning and data integrity analytics into the SIEM environment, creating shared visibility across security operations and IT teams.
Pranay Ahlawat, chief technology and AI officer at Commvault, said trusted recovery has become mission-critical.
“Driving clean and trusted recoveries is now a business imperative,” Ahlawat said in a statement.
“By bringing together CrowdStrike’s security insights with Commvault’s deep AI-powered data intelligence, we’re making it easier for security and IT teams to collaborate, identify threats earlier, and make informed, trusted recovery decisions that can keep organisations moving.”
Daniel Bernard, chief business officer at CrowdStrike, added that in the modern threat environment, “speed and confidence are everything”.
“By bringing Commvault’s recovery intelligence into CrowdStrike Falcon Next-Gen SIEM, we’re giving organisations a unified operational view that connects security signals with data trust,” Bernard said.
According to both companies, shared telemetry enables faster triage, clearer assessment of impacted systems, and more coordinated containment and recovery workflows, reducing delays.
The integration is available immediately through the CrowdStrike Marketplace at no additional charge, allowing joint customers to activate the capability within existing environments.
David Hollingworth
David Hollingworth has been writing about technology for over 20 years, and has worked for a range of print and online titles in his career. He is enjoying getting to grips with cyber security, especially when it lets him talk about Lego.