Fixing the gaps in network incident response with Tines

A live webinar on June 2, 2026 explores how automation and AI-assisted workflows can cut triage delays and speed resolution during network incidents.
Network incidents don’t usually spiral because there’s nothing to monitor. They escalate when visibility isn’t paired with a coordinated way to act, forcing IT teams into manual triage and stressful coordination across unrelated tools.
On Tuesday. June 2. 2026. BleepingComputer will host a live webinar titled “From alert to resolution: Fixing the gaps in network incident response” with Tines.. The session is designed to address a common operational bottleneck: incidents often get bogged down between the moment an alert fires and the point when teams can confidently drive it to resolution.
The webinar centers on a straightforward problem.. As technical environments get more complex, alerts don’t come from one place anymore.. They arrive from monitoring platforms, infrastructure systems, identity tools, and security products, each contributing part of the picture.. When alert volumes rise. IT teams may still lean on manual investigation and ad-hoc routing during high-pressure events. which can slow response times and raise the chance of service disruption.
Meanwhile, the “jumping” problem is rarely subtle.. Network incidents can force teams to move across monitoring dashboards. infrastructure utilities. ticketing systems. and communication channels just to piece together what’s happening and decide what to do next.. The webinar argues that even small delays at this stage can compound as the incident progresses.
That’s why the session focuses on coordinated response workflows—process design that connects alerting. triage. analysis. routing. and resolution into a more continuous chain.. The aim is to reduce the handoffs that typically consume time during incidents. and to improve how quickly actions can be aligned across the systems involved.
Tines. according to the event details. is presented as a way for teams to build intelligent workflows that combine automation and AI.. The promise is to streamline incident response by reducing repetitive work and coordinating actions across systems. rather than treating incident handling as a series of separate. manual steps.
The webinar will also walk through how incidents often evolve from the first alert to actual service impact.. Understanding that path matters because many teams only discover what’s missing—such as where context is lost or decisions get delayed—after the incident has already moved beyond the initial signal.
In particular, the session highlights places where triage, enrichment, and routing break down in real-world workflows. When the steps are fragmented, alerts can remain incomplete for too long, and teams may waste time chasing information across systems instead of taking structured next actions.
To address that, the webinar outlines how alerts can be automatically enriched with network, identity, and threat context. That kind of enrichment is intended to make downstream decisions less dependent on manual interpretation, improving consistency in how incidents are categorized and handled.
The event also plans to cover techniques for prioritizing and routing incidents without relying on manual intervention. In practice, that can mean making routing decisions earlier and more reliably, so the right response steps are triggered before the situation worsens.
Finally, the webinar ties these pieces together by focusing on the shift from fragmented response to coordinated resolution across systems.. For IT teams. the practical implication is clear: faster movement from alert to resolution can help reduce response delays and lower the operational risk of outages during network incidents.
Registrations are open for the live session. which invites attendees to learn how automation and AI-assisted workflows can close the gaps that slow incident handling in complex environments.. For teams dealing with rising alert volumes and multi-system tooling. the topic lands on an urgent operational reality: coordination is often the difference between a contained event and a disruptive one.
network incident response IT automation AI workflows alert triage security operations incident management
This sounds like something that would be amazing… until it touches real life IT and then everything breaks. But yeah, triage delays are the worst.
So they’re gonna use AI to connect alerts to tickets and “resolve” faster? Cool. I just don’t trust it. Half the time the alert is already wrong or missing the context.
Honestly I’m just tired of bouncing between dashboards. If this helps stop the back-and-forth and makes it more like one flow, I’m for it. We waste so much time copying info into the ticket.
Automation is nice but can it fix the fact that nobody documents anything? Like the real gap is people not updating runbooks. Still, webinars are always interesting I guess.