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Quick Wins in Vulnerability Management

Quick Wins in Vulnerability Management. Classification: Confidential Owner: Michael Holcomb Approver: Phil Cirulli Prepared: April 14 th , 2014. Agenda. The Need for Vulnerability Management Clarifications on Vulnerability Management SANS’ Top 20 Critical Controls Master the Basics

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Quick Wins in Vulnerability Management

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  1. Quick Wins in Vulnerability Management Classification: Confidential Owner: Michael Holcomb Approver: Phil Cirulli Prepared: April 14th, 2014

  2. Agenda The Need for Vulnerability Management Clarifications on Vulnerability Management SANS’ Top 20 Critical Controls Master the Basics Perform a Self Audit Continuous Scanning & Remediation Leverage Vulnerability Data in Incident Response Metrics That Count Secure Your ISP

  3. About Michael Holcomb • 25+ years in Information Technology • 15+ years dedicated to Information Security • Sr. Information Security Manager at Fluor • President of Upstate SC ISSA Chapter • CISSP, GCIH, GCIA, etc.

  4. The Need for Vulnerability Management • The quicker we stop an attacker, the less it costs the business • An attacker today will gain access to your resources and they are on your network now • Proper vulnerability management reduces the attack vectors an attacker can exploit for spreading control through the environment • Gives intrusion detection capabilities times to detect intruder and response to eject from network

  5. Clarifications on Vulnerability Management • Vulnerability assessments and vulnerability management are two different things • Vulnerability assessments and penetration testing are two different things • Soft skills are more important than technical skills in vulnerability management • Successful vulnerability management is required to help secure an environment; successful vulnerability scans help ensure compliance

  6. SANS’ Top 20 Critical Controls • Inventory of Authorized and Unauthorized Devices • Inventory of Authorized and Unauthorized Software • Secure Configurations for Hardware and Software on Mobile Devices, Laptops, Workstations, and Servers • Continuous Vulnerability Assessment and Remediation • Malware Defenses • Application Software Security • Wireless Access Control • Data Recovery Capability • Security Skills Assessment and Appropriate Training to Fill Gaps • Secure Configurations for Network Devices such as Firewalls, Routers, and Switches • Limitation and Control of Network Ports, Protocols, and Services • Controlled Use of Administrative Privileges • Boundary Defense • Maintenance, Monitoring, and Analysis of Audit Logs • Controlled Access Based on the Need to Know • Account Monitoring and Control • Data Protection • Incident Response and Management • Secure Network Engineering • Penetration Tests and Red Team Exercises

  7. Master the Basics

  8. Perform a Self Audit • If you have no Vulnerability Management Program in place today, perform a self audit to discover what vulnerabilities you do have. • Before engaging an outside party to conduct a vulnerability assessment or penetration testing exercise, remediate as many issues as possible.

  9. Continuous Scanning & Remediation • Determine scanning schedule and “window threshold” based on your organization’s requirements • If a new vulnerability is introduced into your environment, how long would it take you to discover and understand the vulnerability? • Compliance requirements, rather than the quest for security, often drive scanning schedules • SEIM solutions now integrating vulnerability scanning management capabilities with host detection capabilities

  10. Leverage Vulnerability Data in Incident Response • Correlate most current vulnerability data to focus intrusion detection response efforts • Identify alerts that can be closed due to inapplicability • Escalate alerts for response based on actual risk for an attack against a specific existing vulnerability

  11. Metrics That Count • Metrics can be used to communicate to technical and non-technical parties the risks associated with existing vulnerabilities within the environment • Such metrics should measure items which can be controlled by the organization • Number of vulnerabilities by risk • Critical, High, Medium/Severe, Low • Average risk (CVSS) score • Remediation time • False remediation

  12. Metrics That Count (cont.) • Sample metrics can be simple, but meaningful • Examples below* demonstrate that while, limited progress is being made for remediating “backlog” of vulnerabilities, processes for addressing new vulnerabilities and patch releases are highly successful

  13. Thank You! • If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to contact me • Email: michael.holcomb@fluor.com • Phone: 864.281.5958

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