Kushagra Sharma's Blog Posts
Kushagra Sharma is a Product Manager at Cisco working on AIOps products that help teams operate complex systems with intelligence and scale. He focuses on translating customer problems into practical, data-driven solutions at the intersection of AI, reliability, and software platforms. Passionate about clear thinking and strong product craft, Kushagra writes to share insights on technology, product strategy, and building systems that actually work in the real world.
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AI at Splunk: Trustworthy Principles for Digital Resilience
Building AI responsibly is one thing, but embedding trust into every aspect of our AI strategy is another entirely – and that’s what Splunk sets out to do. Kriss Deiglmeier and Hao Yang explain more in this blog.

Defining & Improving Your Security Posture
What is your security posture? The result of all your security strategies, processes and practices. Get the total low-down on evaluating & improving yours.

AI: Keep Your Feet on the Ground
Splunk is excited about AI, but we're keeping our boots on the ground as we partner with customers to leverage AI to improve efficiency while continuing the essentials via Splunk’s platform.

Enter The Gates: An Analysis of the DarkGate AutoIt Loader
The Splunk Threat Research Team (STRT) provides a deep dive analysis of the DarkGate malware and its use of AutoIt.

Incident Response Plans: The Complete Guide To Creating & Maintaining IRPs
Need to update your incident response plan? Start here! We’ll show how to create one that works, and how to maintain it for the long haul so it stays effective.
![Observability and Telecommunications Network Management [Part 1]](https://www.splunk.com/content/dam/splunk-blogs/images/media_1be890c8e1f26f28513ea1dff4ef92a92fa057aae/observability-and-telecommunications-network-manag.avif?width=300&format=avif&optimize=medium)
Observability and Telecommunications Network Management [Part 1]
When considering the management of telecommunications networks, it might make sense to directly consider the observable data streams available to the practitioner instead of a model-based approach. Learn more in this blog.