[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":4},["ShallowReactive",2],{"raw-en-articles\u002Fsmart-cities-that-use-semantics-to-unify-civic-services-sensors-and-risk-management":3},"---\ntitle: Smart cities that use semantics to unify civic services, sensors, and risk management\ndescription: Security semantics for Smart cities that use semantics to unify civic services, sensors, and risk management\nlang: en\nnavigation:\n  enabled: false\n  section: articles\n  order: 30\ntags:\n  - risk\n  - smart-cities\n---\nWhen threat semantics are consistent across tools, incident response becomes systematic.\n\n## Why this matters\n\nShared threat models mean detection rules work across tools instead of per-platform rewrites.\n\n## What this looks like in practice\n\n- A threat detection rule means the same thing in the SIEM, EDR, and cloud platforms.\n- Incident severity is assessed consistently whether reported by analysts or automated monitoring.\n- Attack patterns are reusable across teams investigating the same threat with different tools.\n\n## How teams use it\n\n- sharing threat intelligence that maps to actual controls, not just descriptions\n- correlating alerts across security tools without building custom integrations\n- measuring security posture consistently across infrastructure, application, and data\n\nSecurity resilience is a team property—it depends on shared threat and response interpretation.\n",1776235589875]