Skip to main content

Huntress Expands Managed ITDR to Google Workspace

Huntress expanded its Managed Identity Threat Detection & Response solution from Microsoft 365 to Google Workspace, extending detection and response capabilities to cloud identity environments.

The company said the move followed progress on Microsoft 365 coverage, including protection for more than 10 million Microsoft 365 identities across more than 93,000 organizations. Huntress also cited identity-based attacks as a large share of security incidents in 2025 and said many organizations still used legacy email security tools.

For Google Workspace, Huntress described a Managed ITDR approach that prioritized high-signal attacker behaviors over noisy telemetry to detect and stop identity abuse in real time. It listed capabilities including identification of unexpected login activity with enforcement of configuration rules for trusted locations or Virtual Private Network (VPN) access, detection of malicious inbox rule persistence tied to Gmail filters, and tracking of malicious datacenter utilization based on identities authenticating from new data center providers.

Huntress said the expansion built on its existing Managed ITDR coverage for Microsoft 365, providing unified identity detection and response across the two platforms. Prakash Ramamamurthy, Chief Product Officer at Huntress, said, “Hackers aren’t breaking in anymore, they’re logging in, and Google Workspace is increasingly at the center of that risk,” adding, “With our expansion of Managed ITDR to Google Workspace, we’re ensuring businesses are protected across the cloud ecosystem without adding operational burden to resource-constrained security teams.” Blair Compton, IT Director at BizStream, said, “Huntress Managed ITDR for GWS gives us confidence that identity threats will be investigated and handled by experts, not surfaced as yet another alert for our team to chase.” Jason Caine, Chief Engineer at Crisis Communication Plan (CCP) Tech, said, “Managing identity risk across our Google Workspace tenants used to be a constant resource strain on our team, especially when attacks look like normal user behavior.” Huntress said the solution was available now to new and existing Huntress customers.