15-Second summary
Do CTI analysts really need another podcast? No. Do they need Scattered Spider TTP updates with an indie/emo vibe? Absolutely yes. Have we been told this is a terrible idea? Multiple times. Are we doing it anyway? You’re already reading the blog.
Feedly ThreatBeats turns your daily threat intelligence into a personalized mix tape, because why read about APT activity when you can dance to it?
With this new feature, you can:
- Get your morning threat brief delivered as a full track, covering new CVEs, emerging campaigns, and threat actor drama. Risk Sync Mode (RSM) adjusts the tempo and genre based on each threat’s severity. CVSS 8? Smooth jazz. Industry cyberattack? Death metal.
This blog walks you through how ThreatBeats works and lets you preview sample tracks. We are deeply sorry in advance.
The problem with threat intelligence (besides the threats)
Every morning, CTI analysts open their queues to find dozens of unread reports, vendor advisories, and a “quick RFI” from the CISO that is never quick. The intel is critical. The format is a punishment. Somewhere between the third threat actor profile, written entirely in the passive voice, and your second cup of coffee, the signal gets lost. No wonder CTI burnout is real.
ThreatBeats fixes this by bypassing the part of your brain that has given up on vendor reports and routing directly to the part that still feels things. Instead of reading that a financially motivated threat actor is actively exploiting a critical authentication bypass, you hear it, and sometimes you feel it in your bones. Why? The Feedly AI has correctly assessed this as a thrash metal situation. Your threat queue becomes a setlist. Your morning briefing becomes something you might actually finish.
Here are a few examples of the tunes you can expect:
Root Access and Regret
Every country song is about losing something. A truck. A dog. Root access to your entire Docker container because you trusted the vm module. This one’s no different.
83 Million Downloads ft. The Axios Attack
The Axios supply chain attack was so calculated, so precise, and so self-destructing that it honestly deserved its own soundtrack. We just gave it one.
The Call (A Social Engineering Ballad) by ShinyHunters
ShinyHunters got the Broadway treatment because this attack was a show-stopper.
One Server to Fall
A Chinese-nexus threat actor turned a trusted government video conferencing platform into a malware delivery channel. If that doesn’t deserve a mosh pit, nothing does.
⚠️ Warning: Feedly does not recommend listening to this track during incident response. Studies suggest it may cause analysts to flip tables, draft strongly worded threat reports, or argue incessantly about which criticalist-of-the-critical patches should go first.
Lullaby for the Exploit Market
Someone built a full-chain iOS exploit kit. Someone else bought it. Someone else opened it. Lo-fi because everyone involved clearly needs to calm down.
That’s a wrap
Threat actors don’t take days off, zero-days don’t wait for business hours, and the brief is never as short as the name implies. You’re out here tracking APT campaigns, triaging CVEs, and explaining to leadership why “we have a firewall” is not a security strategy. The least we can do is make the threat landscape sound a little better. ThreatBeats isn’t real, but the respect is. Now go warn somebody about something.
Are your mornings (and days and nights) too noisy?
Try Feedly Threat Intelligence for free and see how they get a little calmer and a lot more productive. We promise the actual product is way more useful than this blog.
Try Now
FAQs
Is ThreatBeats a real feature?
No. Please don’t ask your TI Advisor about it.
The threat landscape is exhausting and we needed an outlet. You’re welcome.
Does Risk Sync Mode work in reverse? Can I make a CVSS 10 into smooth jazz
Um, sure. It’s a fake feature, knock yourself out. Professionally, we cannot recommend it.
My CISO saw this announcement. What do I do?
Forward them the lo-fi track and tell them everything is fine.
We wrote lyrics about real threats. We fed them to Google Gemini’s new music generation feature. We pressed generate. We kept pressing generate. Some songs came out perfect on the first try. Others took several attempts and a level of emotional negotiation with an AI that we were not prepared for. The reggaeton version exists but will not be released at this time. Huge thank you to the Gemini team for making it possible for a group of threat intelligence nerds to launch our 5-minute music career.


