Findings that tell you what to do next
Most governance tools give you a list of problems. Stratoscope gives you a decision surface — every finding arrives with a proposed fix, the rationale behind it, the exact command that will run, and the risk level. You decide. Nothing runs without you.
Request early accessWhat every decision shows you
No black boxes. Every proposed action is fully transparent before you approve it.
The finding
What was detected — the specific resource, the WAF pillar it violates, and how it was found. Linked back to the discovery sweep that surfaced it.
The rationale
Why this matters, informed by your ingested runbooks and architecture docs. Not generic Azure documentation — your context.
The exact command
The precise Azure CLI command or ARM operation that will execute. You can read it, modify it, or reject it. No hidden steps.
The risk level
High-risk steps — those that modify critical resources or require elevated permissions — are gated individually. Low-risk fixes can be approved in bulk.
The plan
Multi-step remediations are presented as execution plans. You see the full sequence before any step runs. Approve step-by-step or the whole plan at once.
The outcome
After execution, the platform verifies the fix held. Result logged, finding resolved, watch rule set to alert on regression.
Human-in-the-loop is architecture, not a checkbox
HITL is the core approval primitive in Stratoscope. It's not a safety net bolted on after the fact — every mutating operation flows through it.
Every create, update, and delete operation requires explicit human approval.
Multi-step plans present the full sequence before any step executes.
High-risk and irreversible operations are gated individually, regardless of plan approval.
You can approve, deny, or modify any proposed command before it runs.
Approvals are logged with timestamp, approver identity, and outcome for full audit trail.
Denied operations generate feedback that feeds back into the planning model.
Least privilege by default, escalation when needed
Stratoscope runs with a least-privilege service principal. When an operation requires elevated permissions, the platform surfaces a specific escalation request — the exact permission needed, for the exact scope, for the exact operation. You approve it. It runs under your delegated identity. It's logged. The elevated access expires immediately after.
A fix is blocked on a permission. Scout surfaces the exact escalation needed. You approve. The plan resumes.
No stalled work orders. No back-and-forth. The governance loop doesn't stop — it waits for you, then continues.
See the decision surface in action
Join the private preview and see how Stratoscope turns your first discovery sweep into a prioritized action queue.
Request early access