QRadar takes in quite a few vuln scanners as well as pulls in from several 
kinds of UTM devices (which may include vuln scanners)

Here is a list to look through: 
http://q1labs.com/products/supported-devices.aspx

Depending on how you are managing your endpoints and budget you can potentially 
bundle Qradar and Tivoli Endpoint Manager. This will let you scan and patch to 
save some time. It will take in data from other scanners as well like nessus.
http://support.bigfix.com/product/documents/Tivoli_Endpoint_Manager_Administrators_Guide_81.pdf


From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Albert R. Campa
Sent: Tuesday, December 11, 2012 8:51 AM
To: [email protected]; PaulDotCom Security Weekly Mailing List
Subject: Re: [Pauldotcom] Best ROI Combination - Metasploit & Training

stand alone Nessus does integrate with Qradar.

I really like Nessus as a scanner and also as you say, using audit files.

SANS training like 560 or 542 are both good, offsec training is great as well.

im interested to know why you dont like Nessus as a vulnerability scanner?

On Mon, Dec 10, 2012 at 6:37 PM, Arch Angel 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I would like to thank everyone for the advice and suggestions, it is truly 
appreciated and welcomed!

I cannot go into detail as to the company or the status but I can say that in 
my region we are looking to build a ground up program and are under Visa, 
MasterCard, Discover, and ISO guidelines / requirements.  We currently have 
Nessus, which till I walked in had not even been installed.  As a matter of 
fact I asked which machine it was on, the reply was "Well we couldn't get it 
licensed because it would have required a firewall change and that's a hassle 
so we just never installed it".  Needless to say it is installed and I'm 
working through the trials and tribulations of red tape to get it to do more 
for us than host discovery.  That being said I absolutely love Nessus but not 
as a vulnerability scanner.  I like it automating configuration checks, custom 
audit files, checking Active Directory items, etc..  I prefer NexPose for 
vulnerability and NexPose seamlessly integrates with Q1 Labs, QRadar SIEM, 
which I am not sure Nessus does.  QRadar is coming down the pipe from corporate 
before too long.

I also prefer to invest in good people rather than tools which, as mention 
above, have a tendency to sit in the virtual bookshelf collecting virtual dust 
if the people don't know how to use them. This may end up being answered based 
on $$$ over the 2013 calendar year.  Unfortunately I was not part of the 2013 
budget plans, so it may end up being nothing till 2014 :-(

For example, I am in the process of building a wireless auditing program based 
on Kismet, and off the shelf hardware.  This is actually working quite well so 
far during testing!

--

Thank you,

Robert Miller
http://www.armoredpackets.com

Twitter: @arch3angel


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