SecurityScorecard

Senior Research Engineer, Threat Intelligence

SecurityScorecard$127K — $162K *
US-AnywhereRemote in Canada
Information Technology
5 - 7 years of experience
Job Overview by Ladders

Qualifications

  • Bachelor's or Master's in Computer Science, Cybersecurity, or a related technical field.
  • 5 to 8 years in a hands-on engineering role with threat intelligence, security research, or detection engineering exposure.
  • Expertise with Python and TypeScript/Node at a production level.
  • Understanding of STIX 2.1, TAXII 2.1, MISP, and MITRE ATT&CK frameworks in practice.
  • Experience shipping production systems using language models.

Responsibilities

  • Own the research output to production-ready artifact pipeline.
  • Build and maintain STRIKE platform components across multiple services.
  • Turn research findings into shipped detection content and build distribution pipelines.
  • Drive STIX 2.1 adoption and govern schemas for downstream teams.
  • Automate research workflows to enhance analyst efficiency and accuracy.
  • Coordinate between engineering, product management, and research teams for effective delivery.

Benefits

  • Competitive salary and stock options.
  • Health benefits and unlimited paid time off (PTO).
  • Parental leave and tuition reimbursement.
Full Job Description
About the Role:

You'll join STRIKE, SecurityScorecard's Threat Intelligence team, as the engineering counterpart to research. STRIKE runs several research motions in parallel, each on its own clock: rapid response to active events, longer product-tied work, and standards-anchored research on a quarterly cadence. The path from a finding to a shipped detection or feed gets reinvented every time. That's the problem this role is here to solve.

You'll work directly with the senior technical leader who owns STRIKE's R&D direction, and report to the Head of Threat Research for people management. Technical direction comes from R&D leadership; you own delivery. You'll take a research artifact (a malware finding, an infrastructure cluster, a new indicator class, a behavioral pattern) and turn it into something the company can use without a second round of engineering: schemas, pipeline hooks, distribution feeds, detection rules, or platform APIs.

This isn't a pure research role, and it isn't a pure platform role either. Researchers ideate, you ship.

Key Responsibilities:

Research-to-Production Pipeline
  • Own the path from research output to production-ready artifact: a detection rule, a distributed feed, a scoring input, or a customer alert. Partner with adjacent teams to define clean handoff contracts, so new signals arrive downstream with the schema, value framing, and consumption pattern already defined.

Threat Intelligence Platform Engineering
  • Build and maintain STRIKE platform components across multiple services and runtimes, including distribution servers, sandbox orchestration, OSINT ingestion, federated sharing endpoints, agent runtimes, and rules engines that operate over standards-anchored predicates. Extend these systems without breaking the data contracts already in production.

Detection Content and Signal Production
  • Turn research into shipped detection content: YARA, Sigma, STIX patterns, behavioral indicators, and the pipelines that distribute them. Build correlation pipelines that link scan data, attack surface signals, vulnerability data, and adversary tracking into customer-facing intelligence.

Data Model and Standards Adoption
  • Drive STIX 2.1 adoption as a unified output schema and TAXII 2.1 as a distribution standard. Define and govern schemas that hold up once they reach downstream teams.

Research Workflow Engineering
  • Build the automation that removes commodity overhead from research work: indicator enrichment, report drafting, corpus correlation, feed normalization, and sandbox triage. Help move the team from analyst-driven, model-assisted workflows toward model-driven workflows with analyst review.
  • The work that matters most here is often the unglamorous part: retrieval grounded in the team's own corpus so outputs cite sources rather than model priors, schema-constrained output so a generated indicator is a valid one, and eval harnesses that catch regressions before analysts do. Cost accounting, latency budgeting, prompt versioning, and output logging round out the infrastructure that makes a workflow safe to run unattended.
  • You should have a clear sense of when a model is the wrong tool. A regex beats a model for known patterns; a SQL query beats a model for structured data. Knowing where that line sits, and respecting it, is part of the job.

Cross-Functional Delivery
  • Coordinate with engineering, measurement, and platform product teams so research actually lands in product. You'll often serve as the engineering voice translating between researchers, product managers, and platform engineers, and you may occasionally explain the work to customers, journalists, or executives.

Qualifications

Education: Bachelor's or Master's in Computer Science, Cybersecurity, or a related technical field. Self-taught practitioners with strong public work are welcome.

Experience: 5 to 8 years in a hands-on engineering role with meaningful exposure to threat intelligence, security research, or detection engineering. Prior experience building production systems that consume or emit threat intel data is required.

Technical Skills:
  • Python and TypeScript/Node at a production level
  • Relational and cache data stores, plus at least one streaming or batch data platform
  • Cloud infrastructure (AWS preferred), containers, and CI/CD pipelines
  • Working knowledge of STIX 2.1, TAXII 2.1, MISP, and MITRE ATT&CK, and how they work together in practice

Detection and Research Tooling: Hands-on experience with YARA, Sigma, and STIX Patterning. Comfortable reading malware analysis output, parsing adversary infrastructure data, and writing detection logic that holds up under production load.

Applied Language Models: You've shipped production systems that use language models, not just demos. That includes retrieval over a real corpus, structured output with schema validation, eval harnesses that catch regressions before users do, and a solid understanding of where models fail: recency, long-tail facts, numerical reasoning, and adversarial input or prompt injection. You can do the cost-per-task math for your workloads, and you can make the case when a smaller, tightly scaffolded model beats a larger one.

You approach model output with healthy skepticism by default. The bar for shipping a model-generated indicator or detection is higher than for shipping a regex, and you understand why and design accordingly.

Bridge Mindset: You write code that ships, and you understand why researchers think the way they do. If you've only ever worked from a backlog handed down by a product manager, this probably isn't the right fit. If you've taken an idea sketched out in a chat message and turned it into a deployed pipeline before the next sprint began, that's the mode we're looking for.

Bonus:
  • Experience with policy-as-code or expression-language engines (CEL, OPA, or similar)
  • Published or co-authored security research (campaigns, vulnerabilities, adversary tracking)
  • Large-scale telemetry experience (Splunk, Kinesis, NetFlow, or equivalent)
  • Contributor or maintainer on open-source threat intel projects (MISP, OpenCTI, Sigma, STIX, ATT&CK)
  • Familiarity with quantitative risk frameworks such as FAIR
  • Familiarity with Golang at a production level

Benefits:

Specific to each country, we offer a competitive salary, stock options, Health benefits, and unlimited PTO, parental leave, tuition reimbursements, and much more!

The estimated total compensation range for this position is $127,500-$162,500 CAD (base plus bonus). Actual compensation for the position is based on a variety of factors, including, but not limited to affordability, skills, qualifications and experience, and may vary from the range. In addition to base salary, employees may also be eligible for annual performance-based incentive compensation awards and equity, among other company benefits.

About SecurityScorecard

SecurityScorecard is a cybersecurity ratings company that provides risk assessment and management tools to businesses. The company's platform analyzes data from various sources to generate a scorecard that rates a company's security posture. This scorecard can be used to identify potential vulnerabilities and prioritize remediation efforts. SecurityScorecard's clients include Fortune 500 companies, financial institutions, and government agencies. The company was founded in 2013 and is headquartered in Brooklyn, New York.
Learn more about SecurityScorecard
Size
250 employees
Industry
Founded
2013

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