We've added Atlassian Confluence to our list of integrations
We’re pleased to announce that we’ve just added Atlassian Confluence to our list of supported integrations, bringing the total to sixteen as of today. Yay! So, why is that a good thing? Let us explain!
Unless you are one of the handful of people who enjoys maintaining documentation (you know who you are), it almost always turns into a bit of a chore. And if it gets done at all, it also tends to lag behind reality too. So, just when you really need it for some important task, you find that it is useless anyway. Bah!
Fortunately, scarlet’s Confluence integration changes all that. Now, whenever your attack surface changes (new servers or firewall rules etc), then scarlet will immediately detect it, and update your documentation to match. Yay!
And as if keeping the documentation updated isn’t enough of a benefit on its own, you also get access to all the inherent Confluence, and broader Atlassian-stack functionality too:
What if you need your DevOps team to make some changes to an environment to remove some unused services? You can simply copy a link to the problem systems from the Confluence page, then paste it into a Jira ticket. Now the DevOps team can not only see exactly what’s wrong, but they can also check back after they have made any changes, to ensure that the fix worked as expected.
Or supposing you want to see how your environment has changed over time, just click on the Confluence history tab, and you can get a comparison view between any two dates you like.
And how about if you need to give your documentation to someone external (like an auditor or red team), just click the save to PDF button in Confluence, and you’re done.
Our goal is to make scarlet the first choice for a high-value, low-effort way to immediately improve your security. No more forgotten servers!™
But don’t take our word for it, why not just give it a try? There’s a free, unrestricted trial available, and you only need an email address to register. You could literally be up and running, and seeing the value in ten minutes.