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Chapter 5

Chapter 5. Maintaining Security of Operations. Objectives. Establish routine security of operation Create a dependable operational security process Ensure operational response to incidents. Security of Operations. A critical part of information assurance lifecycle

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Chapter 5

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  1. Chapter 5 Maintaining Security of Operations

  2. Objectives • Establish routine security of operation • Create a dependable operational security process • Ensure operational response to incidents

  3. Security of Operations • A critical part of information assurance lifecycle • Ensures the integrity and performance • Process involves actions such as: • Ensuring that current operating procedures are properly aligned with organization’s security policies • Monitoring performance of assigned security duties to confirm that they correspond to proper processes • Defining and executing operational housekeeping processes to ensure that the security function continues to operate properly

  4. Aims: Aligning Purpose with Practice • Information assurance goals must be satisfied for the organization to be secure • Factors that can affect this process include changes in: • People who use the system or their motivations • Types of systems interconnected with the organization’s systems • Type or sensitivity of data • Way the organization does business or type of business the organization conducts • Rigor and extent of information assurance objectives • Organizational risk model and risk tolerance approach

  5. Aims: Aligning Purpose with Practice • If information assurance goal is not being met • The organization performs a risk assessment/risk mitigation process to decide how to meet it

  6. Threat Response: Keeping the Organization on Its Toes • Threat response is either proactive or reactive • Proactive activities include • Identification of threats and vulnerabilities • Creation, assessment, and optimization of security solutions • Implementation of controls to protect the software and the information • Reactive activities include • Detecting and reacting to external or internal intrusions or security violations in a timely manner

  7. Staying Alert: Elements of the Operational Security Process • Operational security process is composed of principles • These principles represent the primary functions of the operational security process: • Sensing • Analyzing • Responding • Managing

  8. Sensing: Understanding the Threat • Operational sensing is proactive • Must be performed continuously • Implemented and run by defined policies, procedures, tools, and standards • Monitors, tests, and assesses the environment, to detect vulnerabilities and security violations • Identifies and resolves threats as they arise • Reviews monitor and evaluate management and end-user behavior

  9. Sensing: Understanding the Threat • Security assurance requires documentary evidence of: • Feasible information assurance and security perimeter • Overall concept of standard operating procedure • Generic operational testing and review plan • Policies to ensure appropriate response to unexpected incidents • Secure site plan • Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Plan (BCP/DRP) • Assurance that all are adequately trained in secure operation • Assurance that all are capable of utilizing security functionality relevant to their position in the organization

  10. Analyzing: Making Smart Decisions • A good decision about a given threat requires understanding the consequences and impacts • Threat assessment – understanding the consequences • Impact analysis – evaluating the strategy • Reporting – understanding the alternatives • Authorizing – getting the go-ahead

  11. Responding: Ensuring a Disciplined Response • This function implements the authorized corrective action • Factors that might influence the decision are: • Resource constraints • Difficulty, or unfeasibility of the response required • All threats and vulnerabilities should be tracked and the resulting responses overseen • A defined process is required to ensure that this is done accurately

  12. Managing: Maintaining an Effective Process • All information assurance processes as a routine function have to be: • Planned • Designed • Administered • Maintained • Ensure that effective leadership vision and expertise is exercised at all times • It oversees and coordinates the alignment process to maintain the best response to threats and changes in a dynamically changing situation

  13. Implementation: Setting Up the Security of Operations Process • Security of operations is founded on organization-wide policies, procedures, and countermeasures • Maintains the relevance and effectiveness of the infrastructure • Specifies the approved methods and processes that will be followed to ensure security performance • Should be embedded as part of day-to-day workplace functioning • Operational assessment is critical • Methods and metrics used to track performance must be specified • Certifications must be used to judge proper execution

  14. Operational Planning • A formal security of operations plan is an important baseline document • Acts as a point of reference in the evolution of events and day-to-day management • Operationalizes and coordinates the elements of the security of operations function • Organizes and focuses the effective deployment of resources • Supports the budgeting process • Makes the security objectives explicit • Serves as a mechanism for assessing contractual and regulatory obligations • Organizes technical and management response so that the right set of countermeasures is always in place

  15. Operational Planning • Operational security plan is built and maintained through eight stages

  16. Steps for a Secure Operation • Step 1: document the baseline • Step 2: determine the benchmarks • Step 3: establish a security architecture • Step 4: build awareness • Step 5: deploy supporting technology • Step 6: assess performance • Step 7: specify how corrective action will be taken • Step 8: enforce accountability

  17. Operational Response • Security of operations should ensure that an effective operational response in in place • It resolves problems as they appear • Response is established and maintained by a plan • Plan integrates the sensing, analyzing, and responding principles into a set of procedures that meet the security needs • Pre-defined response ensures that an optimum solution is provided in a timely fashion • Timeliness is underwritten by effective incident reporting

  18. Operational Response • Ensuring effective reporting and response • Formal incident response team (IRT) or operational response team (ORT) • Ensuring timely reports • Provides a description of both the type and estimated impact of the incident • Ensuring timely response • Incident reports should go to a single central coordinator or facilitator for confirmation analysis and subsequent action

  19. Anticipating Potential Incidents • Potential incidents include: • Pre-attack probes • Unauthorized access attempts • Denial of service attempts • Vulnerabilities in the infrastructure • Reports are generic and result from routine data-gathering activity and analysis • Reports also result from analyses performed by the software • Reports are generated by intrusion detection devices • Operational event logging monitors events taking place within the system

  20. Working with Active Incidents • Always require an operational response • Actions are dictated by circumstances requiring: • Applying a technical patch • Reconfiguration, or reinstallation of the system • Change in policy and procedure • Implementation of new enforcement mechanisms • Operational response team: • Contains the harm from an incident and prevents its reoccurrence • Supervises the change to the target system through the configuration management process • Performs the coordination and documentation activities needed

  21. Ensuring Continuing Integrity: Configuration Management • Formal procedure undertaken for change management • Refers to the evolution of change to objects • It is a critical component of security for two reasons: • Predictable day-to-day functioning of systems • Ability to detect unauthorized changes • Maintains the integrity of the items under its control • Allows for the evaluation and performance of management changes • Establishes the integrity of the system

  22. Human-based: ConfigurationManagement • Configuration manager role • Processes all requests for change • Manages the change authorization process • Verifies that the change is complete • Baseline manager role • Identifies, accounts for, and maintains all configuration items with the identification scheme • Establishes a baseline management ledger (BML) • Records all changes and promotions to baselines in this ledger • Maintains libraries associated with it

  23. Human-based: ConfigurationManagement • Verification manager role • Confirms that items in the change management ledger conform to the identification scheme • Verifies that changes have been carried out • Conducts milestone reviews and audits • Status accounting – ensures the continuing correct status of each baseline • Changes at any level in the structure must be maintained at all levels

  24. Human-based: ConfigurationManagement • Configuration management plan • Builds a plan that lists the activities in the configuration management function including: • The procedures to be followed during the configuration management process • The schedule for routine activities • The procedures for performing configuration management activity involving other organizations

  25. Operational Housekeeping • Operational housekeeping – ensures that routine information processing activities are performed securely • Responsible for ensuring that the organization’s information is protected from common threats • Proactive measures such as periodic inspections and compliance audits • Managerial concerns • Ensuring that routine patches and repairs to equipment and facilities are performed

  26. Preparing an Operational Procedure Manual • Every organization has to compile, distribute, and update a procedure manual • Details all required procedures to ensure continuous security of operations • Should contain simple checklists providing clear directions for employees performing routine housekeeping • Should ensure that the required steps are listed along with expected results, and a way to determine those results are accurate • There should be a clear statement of the interrelationship between related procedures

  27. Managing Security Patches • Security patches should be in place so that: • Software can be consistently updated and maintained to close vulnerabilities • They are important safeguards and are a routine part of the security maintenance process • Any operating system security update should be verified, tested, and installed immediately

  28. Back Up Your Data, Back Up Your Job • Backups are important housekeeping functions • Support the recovery function • Are essential prerequisites for business continuity • Support the recovery point objective (RPO) in business continuity planning • Other reasons could include: • Hard drive failure • Serious virus attack or other accidents • Based on a schedule dictated by operational circumstances

  29. Enforcing Personal Security Discipline • Personal security discipline implies that the staff members routinely follow approved security procedures • Steps need to be taken to ensure that routine activities are performed in a continuous and repeatable way • Discipline is the key to ensuring that routine behaviors are performed • Discipline hinges on people understanding the importance of routine security practices • Education, training, and awareness function

  30. Maintaining Your Software • Software must be configured and operate without conflict • Ensure safe and secure operation • Provide essential automated security service • Visible part of the process: • Registry and file system utilities aligned correctly, interacting properly • Running disk cleanups and performing hardware checks • Security utilities • Virus and spyware checkers and spam filters

  31. Making Your Software Behave • Software functionality is difficult to assure since software interactions occur within the computer • Necessary to perform system integrity checks • Assure that the registry files, applications, and system utilities are installed properly and working as designed • Preventive maintenance should be routinely scheduled, coordinated, enforced, and reported through the information assurance function

  32. Watching Your Back • Have a set of operational procedures in place to secure application systems • Procedures include system management responsibilities such as: • Ensuring that security functions are enabled on both user and administrative accounts • Conducting software engineering procedures such as routine operational testing • Including simple processes such as regularly ensuring that passwords are changed • Checking system event logs periodically

  33. Disposing of Assets in a Secure Manner • A critical part of the day-to-day integrity of information is the secure disposal of media • There must be rules for the secure erasure or destruction of electronic storage media • Routine clear out of temporary files and temporary Internet cache files • Use of modern shredders to dispose of paper copies • In the case of especially sensitive material, the use of contracted destruction services • Magnetic storage media such as floppies routinely degaussed or shredded prior to disposal

  34. Locking Down Electronic Office Systems • Ensure that e-mail and office automation systems are tightly controlled • There is a need to develop and formalize a statement of what is and is not acceptable use • This is called an acceptable use policy • Serves as the formal basis for subsequent control

  35. Defining Good Security Practice for an E-Mail System • Defining, communicating, and enforcing good security practice in the daily operation of the e-mail system can prevent most violations • Monitoring of acceptable use is frequently used in larger organizations and can be embedded in a software utility

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