Overview
This article explains how to use the right-hand pane on the Assets page in Hyver to examine asset details. You’ll learn what each section shows, how to interpret asset metadata, and how filters can help you explore relevant assets more efficiently.
1. Open asset details
From the Assets page, click on any asset row. A detailed view appears in the right-hand pane.
2. Review key metadata
ID
Each asset has a unique ID, starting with #A- (e.g., #A-258). You can use this to search for specific assets. To copy the ID, click the copy icon next to it.
Importance
Indicates how critical the asset is to the organization. More blue boxes = higher importance. This reflects potential business impact.
Relevancy
Shows whether the asset is Relevant or Not Relevant to the current assessment. Only relevant assets are scanned by Hyver.
3. Explore asset tabs
Properties
Displays basic asset attributes (such as IP, hostname, type).
Related Entities
Lists other entities connected to this asset (such as users, systems, or services).
Standards
Shows associated frameworks or standards (like NIST), when applicable. This tab is only visible for certain asset types — such as technology or process assets.
Activity
Tracks actions performed on the asset. Includes:Assigned tags
Collection method (manual or automatic)
Last collected and created date
Source of the asset (e.g., Hyver, Qualys integration)
4. Use filters to refine your view
Click the Filters pane to apply targeted filters, such as:
Domain – see only assets related to a specific domain
IP within range – narrow the list by IP block:
Created by – filter by source: Hyver, your company, or a specific user
You can also Group by Created by to better organize the asset list by source:
Important notes
Not all assets have associated standards — this depends on asset type.
Relevancy helps determine which assets are scanned and included in risk analysis.
Filtering is useful for large engagements with many assets across domains.
Wrap-up / Next Steps
Use the right-hand pane to quickly access rich context about each asset — from relationships and metadata to collection history and relevance. These details support better prioritization during analysis and remediation.










