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ITC358 ICT Management and Information Security

ITC358 ICT Management and Information Security. Chapter 11 Personnel and Security. I’ll take fifty percent efficiency to get one hundred percent loyalty. - Samuel Goldwyn, U.S. film producer. Objectives. Upon completion of this chapter, you should be able to:

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ITC358 ICT Management and Information Security

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  1. ITC358ICT Management and Information Security Chapter 11 Personnel and Security I’ll take fifty percent efficiency to get one hundred percent loyalty. - Samuel Goldwyn, U.S. film producer

  2. Objectives • Upon completion of this chapter, you should be able to: • Identify the skills and requirements for information security positions • List the various information security professional certifications, and identify which skills are encompassed by each • Discuss and implement information security constraints on the general hiring processes • Explain the role of information security in employee terminations • Describe the security practices used to control employee behavior and prevent misuse of information

  3. Introduction • Maintaining a secure environment • Requires that the InfoSec department be carefully structured and staffed with appropriately credentialed personnel • Proper procedures must be integrated into all human resources activities • Including hiring, training, promotion, and termination practices

  4. Staffing the Security Function • Selecting an effective mix of information security personnel • Requires consideration of several criteria • Some are within the control of the organisation • Others are not • Supply and demand for personnel with critical information security skills • When demand rises quickly, initial supply often fails to meet it • As demand becomes known, professionals enter the job market or refocus their job skills to gain the required skills, experience, and credentials

  5. Staffing the Security Function (cont’d.) • To move the InfoSec discipline forward, managers should: • Learn more about the requirements and qualifications for information security positions and relevant IT positions • Learn more about information security budgetary and personnel needs • Grant the information security function (and CISO) an appropriate level of influence and prestige

  6. Qualifications and Requirements • Desired abilities for information security professionals • Understanding of how organisations are structured and operated • Recognising that InfoSec is a management task that cannot be handled with technology alone • Work well with people and communicate effectively using both written and verbal communication • Acknowledging the role of policy in guiding security efforts

  7. Qualifications and Requirements (cont’d.) • Desired abilities for information security professionals (cont’d.) • Understanding of the essential role of information security education and training • Helps make users part of the solution, rather than part of the problem • Perceive the threats facing an organisation • Understand how these threats can become attacks, and safeguard the organisation • Understanding how to apply technical controls

  8. Qualifications and Requirements (cont.) • Desired abilities for information security professionals (cont’d.) • Demonstrated familiarity with the mainstream information technologies • Including Disk Operating System (DOS), Windows, Linux, and UNIX • Understanding of IT and InfoSec terminology and concepts

  9. Entering the Information Security Profession • Many InfoSec professionals enter the field • After careers in law enforcement or the military • Or careers in other IT areas, such as networking, programming, database administration, or systems administration • Organisations can foster greater professionalism • By clearly defining their expectations and establishing explicit position descriptions

  10. Entering the Information Security Profession (cont’d.) Figure 11-1 Information security career paths Source: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

  11. Information Security Positions • Types of Information security positions • Definers provide the policies, guidelines, and standards • People who consult, do risk assessment and develop the product and technical architectures • Senior people with a broad knowledge, but not a lot of depth • Builders are the real techies, who create and install security solutions • Those that administer the security tools, the security monitoring function, and the people who continuously improve the processes • Where all the day-to-day, hard work is done

  12. Information Security Positions (cont’d.) Figure 11-2 Possible information security positions and reporting relationships Source: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

  13. Information Security Positions (cont’d.) • Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) • Typically considered the top information security officer in the organisation • Usually not an executive-level position • Frequently reports to the CIO • Business managers first and technologists second • They must be conversant in all areas of information security • Including technology, planning, and policy

  14. Information Security Positions (cont’d.) • Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP) • Most common qualification for the CISO • A graduate degree in criminal justice, business, technology, or another related field is usually required for the CISO • CISO candidates should have experience in security management, planning, policy, and budgets

  15. Information Security Positions (cont’d.) • Security Manager • It is not uncommon for a security manager to have a CISSP • Should have experience in traditional business activities, including budgeting, project management, personnel management, hiring and firing • Must be able to draft middle- and lower-level policies, as well as standards and guidelines • Several types exist, and the people tend to be much more specialised than CISOs

  16. Information Security Positions (cont’d.) • Security technicians • Technically qualified individuals who configure firewalls and IDSs, implement security software, diagnose and troubleshoot problems, and coordinate with systems and network administrators to ensure that security technology is properly implemented • Typical information security entry-level position, albeit a technical one

  17. Information Security Positions (cont’d.) • Technical qualifications and position requirements for a security technician vary • Organisations typically prefer expert, certified, proficient technicians • Job requirements usually includes some level of experience with a particular hardware and software package • Experience using the technology is usually required

  18. Information Security Professional Credentials • Many organisations rely on professional certifications • To ascertain the level of proficiency possessed by any given candidate • Many certification programs are relatively new • Their precise value is not fully understood by most hiring organisations • Certifying bodies work to educate their constituent communities on the value and qualifications of their certificate recipients

  19. Information Security Professional Credentials (cont’d.) • Employers struggle to match certifications to position requirements • Potential information security workers try to determine which certification programs will help them in the job market

  20. (ISC)2 Certifications • Certified Information Systems Security Professional • One of the most prestigious certifications • Recognises mastery of domains of an internationally recognisedInfoSec common body of knowledge • Access Control • Application Security • Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Planning • Cryptography

  21. (ISC)2 Certifications (cont’d.) • Certified Information Systems Security Professional (cont’d.) • Recognises mastery of domains of an internationally recognisedInfoSec common body of knowledge (cont’d.) • Information Security and Risk Management • Legal, Regulations, Compliance and Investigations • Operations Security • Physical (Environmental) Security • Security Architecture and Design • Telecommunications and Network Security

  22. (ISC)2 Certifications (cont’d.) • Systems Security Certified Practitioner • More applicable to an entry-level security manager than a technician • Most questions focus on the operational InfoSec • Focuses on practices, roles, and responsibilities covering seven domains: • Access controls • Analysis and monitoring • Cryptography • Malicious code • Networks and Telecommunications • Risk, Response and Recovery • Security Operations and Administration

  23. (ISC)2 Certifications (cont’d.) • ISSAP®: Information Systems Security Architecture Professional • Access control systems and methodology • Telecommunications and network security • Cryptography • Requirements analysis and security standards, guidelines, criteria • Technology-related business continuity planning and disaster recovery planning • Physical security integration

  24. (ISC)2 Certifications (cont’d.) • ISSEP®: Information Systems Security Engineering Professional • Systems security engineering • Certification and accreditation • Technical management • U.S. government information assurance regulations

  25. (ISC)2 Certifications (cont’d.) • ISSMP®: Information Systems Security Management Professional • Business continuity planning (BCP) and disaster recovery planning (DRP) and continuity of operations • Planning (COOP) enterprise security management practices • Enterprise-wide system development security • Law, investigations, forensics, and ethics • Overseeing compliance of operations security

  26. ISACA Certifications • Certified Information Systems Auditor • A certification of the Information Systems Audit and Control Association and Foundation • Appropriate for auditing, networking, and security professionals • Exam covers: • IS audit process (10 percent) • IT governance (15 percent) • Systems and infrastructure life cycle (16 percent) • IT service delivery and support (14 percent) • Protection of information assets (31 percent) • Business continuity and disaster recovery (14 percent)

  27. ISACA Certifications (cont’d.) • Certified Information Security Manager (CISM) • Geared toward experienced information security managers • Assures executive management that a candidate has the required background knowledge needed for effective security management and consulting • Exam covers: • Information security governance (23 percent) • Information risk management (22 percent) • Information security program development (17 percent) • Information security program management (24 percent) • Incident management and response (14 percent)

  28. Global Information Assurance Certification (GIAC) • System Administration, Networking and Security Organisation(SANS) • Developed a series of technical security certifications known as the GIAC • GIAC family of certifications can be pursued independently • Or combined to earn a comprehensive certification called GIAC Security Engineer (GSE), at a silver, gold or platinum level • Other SANS certifications: • Security Professional (GISP) • GIAC Security Leadership Certification (GSLC)

  29. Global Information Assurance Certification (cont’d) • GIAC Certifications • Information security fundamentals (GISF) • Security essentials certification (GSEC) • Certified firewall analyst (GCFW) • Certified intrusion analyst (GCIA) • Certified incident handler (GCIH) • Certified Windows security administrator (GCWN) • Certified UNIX security administrator (GCUX) • Certified forensics analyst (GCFA) • Securing Oracle Certification (GSOC) • Intrusion Prevention (GIPS) • Cutting Edge Hacking Techniques (GHTQ) • Web Application Security (GWAS) • Reverse Engineering Malware (GREM) • Assessing Wireless Networks (GAWN)

  30. Security+ • The CompTIA Security+ certification • Tests for security knowledge mastery • Must have two years of on-the-job networking experience with emphasis on security • Exam covers industry-wide topics including: • Systems security (21%) • Network infrastructure (20%) • Access control (17%) • Assessments & audits (15%) • Cryptography (15%) • Organisational Security (12%)

  31. Certified Computer Examiner (CCE) • A computer forensics certification • Provided by the International Society of Forensic Computer Examiners • Topics include • Acquisition, marking, handling, and storage of evidence procedures • Chain of custody • Essential “core” forensic computer examination procedures • “Rules of evidence” for computer examinations

  32. Certified Computer Examiner (cont’d.) • A computer forensics certification (cont’d.) • Topics include: (cont’d.) • Basic PC hardware construction and theory • Very basic networking theory • Basic data recovery techniques • Authenticating MS Word documents and accessing and interpreting metadata • Basic optical recording processes and accessing data on optical media • Basic password recovery techniques • Basic Internet issues

  33. Certification Costs • Preferred certifications can be expensive • Most experienced professionals find it difficult to do well on the exams without at least some review • Certifications recognise experts in their respective fields • The cost of certification deters those who might otherwise take the exam just to see if they can pass

  34. Certification Costs (cont’d.) • Most examinations: • Require between two and three years of work experience • They are often structured to reward candidates who have significant hands-on experience

  35. Certification Costs (cont’d.) Figure 11-3 Preparing for security certification Source: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

  36. Employment Policies and Practices • Management should integrate solid information security concepts • Across all of the organisation’s employment policies and practices • Including information security responsibilities into every employee’s job description and subsequent performance reviews • Can make an entire organisation take information security more seriously

  37. Hiring • From an information security perspective, hiring employees is laden with potential security pitfalls • Information security considerations should become part of the hiring process • Job descriptions • Provide complete job descriptions when advertising open positions • Omit the elements of the job description that describe access privileges

  38. Hiring (cont’d.) • Interviews • Information security should advise human resources • Limit the information provided to the candidates on the access rights of the position • When an interview includes a site visit • Tour should avoid secure and restricted sites, because the visitor could observe enough information about the operations or information security functions to represent a potential threat to the organisation

  39. Hiring (cont’d.) • New hire orientation • New employees should receive an extensive information security briefing • As part of their orientation • On-the-job security training • Conduct periodic SETA activities • Keeps security at the forefront of employees’ minds and minimises employee mistakes • Security checks • Conduct a background check before extending an offer

  40. Hiring (cont’d.) • Common background checks • Identity checks: personal identity validation • Education and credential checks: institutions attended, degrees and certifications earned, and certification status • Previous employment verification: where candidates worked, why they left, what they did, and for how long • Reference checks: validity of references and integrity of reference sources

  41. Hiring (cont’d.) • Common background checks (cont’d.) • Worker’s compensation history: claims • Motor vehicle records: driving records, suspensions, and other items noted in the applicant’s public record • Drug history: drug screening and drug usage, past and present • Medical history: current and previous medical conditions, usually associated with physical capability to perform the work in the specified position

  42. Hiring (cont’d.) • Common background checks (cont’d.) • Credit history: credit problems, financial problems, and bankruptcy • Civil court history: involvement as the plaintiff or defendant in civil suits • Criminal court history: criminal background, arrests, convictions, and time served

  43. Contracts and Employment • Once a candidate has accepted a job offer • The employment contract becomes an important security instrument • It is important to have these contracts and agreements in place at the time of the hire

  44. Security as Part of Performance Evaluation • Organisations should incorporate information security components into employee performance evaluations • To heighten information security awareness and change workplace behavior, • Employees pay close attention to job performance evaluations • Including information security tasks in them will motivate employees to take more care when performing these tasks

  45. Termination Issues • When an employee leaves an organisation, the following tasks must be performed: • Disable access to the organisation’s systems • Return all removable media • Hard drives must be secured • File cabinet and door locks must be changed • Keycard access must be revoked • Personal effects must be removed • Escort the former employee from the premises

  46. Termination Issues (cont’d.) • Many organisations conduct an exit interview • To remind the employee of any contractual obligations • Such as nondisclosure agreements • To obtain feedback on the employee’s tenure in the organisation • Methods for handling employee outprocessing: hostile and friendly

  47. Termination Issues (cont’d.) • Hostile departure • Security cuts off all logical and keycard access before the employee is terminated • The employee reports for work, and is escorted into the supervisor’s office to receive the bad news • The individual is then escorted from the workplace and informed that his or her personal property will be forwarded, or is escorted to his or her office, cubicle, or personal area to collect personal effects

  48. Termination Issues (cont’d.) • Hostile departure (cont’d.) • Once personal property has been gathered, the employee is asked to surrender all keys, keycards, and other organisational identification and access devices, PDAs, pagers, cell phones, and all remaining company property • Then escorted from the building

  49. Termination Issues (cont’d.) • Friendly departure • The employee may have tendered notice well in advance of the actual departure date • Difficult for security to maintain positive control over the employee’s access and information usage • Employee accounts are usually allowed to continue, with a new expiration date • The employee can come and go at will • Usually collects any belongings and leaves without escort, dropping off all organisational property before departing

  50. Termination Issues (cont’d.) • In either circumstance: • Offices and information used by departing employees must be inventoried, their files stored or destroyed, and all property returned to organisational stores • Departing employees may have collected and taken home information or assets that could be valuable in their future jobs • Scrutinising system logs may allow an organisation to determine whether a breach of policy or a loss of information has occurred

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