1 / 19

Unit Outline Qualitative Risk Analysis

Unit Outline Qualitative Risk Analysis. Module 1: Qualitative Risk Analysis Module 2: Determine Assets and Vulnerabilities Module 3: Determine Threats and Controls Module 4: Matrix Based Approach  Module 5: Case Study Module 6: Summary. Module 5 Case Study.

peyton
Télécharger la présentation

Unit Outline Qualitative Risk Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit OutlineQualitative Risk Analysis Module 1: Qualitative Risk Analysis Module 2: Determine Assets and Vulnerabilities Module 3:Determine Threats and Controls Module 4: Matrix Based Approach  Module 5: Case Study Module 6: Summary

  2. Module 5Case Study

  3. Case StudyLearning Objectives • Students should be able to: • Understand the case. • Derive the assets, vulnerabilities, threats, and controls relevant to the case. • Fill in the Asset/Vulnerability, Vulnerability/Threat, and Threat/Control matrices based on the case in a qualitative manner.

  4. Case StudyExample • Use the information that you have learned in the lecture in the following case study of a government organization. • Remember these key steps for determining ALE • Identify and determine the value of assets • Determine vulnerabilities • Estimate likelihood of exploitation • Compute ALE • Survey applicable controls and their costs • Perform a cost-benefit analysis

  5. Case StudyCase A government agency delivers service throughout New York State. As part of the planning process to prepare the annual budget, the Commissioner has asked the Information Technology Director to perform a risk analysis to determine the organization’s vulnerability to threats against its information assets, and to determine the appropriate level of expenditures to protect against these vulnerabilities. The organization consists of 4,000 employees working in 200 locations, which are organized into 10 regions. The average rate of pay for the employees is $20/hr. Cost benefit analysis has been done on the IT resource deployment, and the current structure is the most beneficial to the organization, so all security recommendations should be based on the current asset deployment Each of the 200 locations has approximately 20 employees using an equal number of desktop and laptop computers for their fieldwork. These computers are used to collect information related to the people served by the organization, including personally identifying information. Half of each employee’s time is spent collecting information from the clients using shared laptop computers, and half is spent processing the client information at the field office using desktop computers. Replacement cost for the laptops is $2,500 and for the desktop is $1,500. Each of the 10 regions has a network server, which stores all of the work activities of the employees in that region. Each server will cost $30,000 to replace, plus 80 hours of staff time. Each incident involving a server costs the organization approximately $1,600 in IT staff resources for recovery. Each incident where financial records or personal information is compromised costs the organization $15,000 in lawyers time and settlement payouts. Assume that the total assets of the organization are worth 10 million dollars. The organization has begun charging fees for the public records it collects. This information is sold from the organization website at headquarters, via credit card transactions. All of the regional computers are linked to the headquarters via an internal network, and the headquarters has one connection to the Internet. The headquarters servers query the regional servers to fulfill the transactions. The fees collected are approximately $10,000 per day distributed equally from each region, and the transactions are uniformly spread out over a 24-hour period.

  6. Case StudyExample- Assets (Tangible) • Transaction Revenue- amount of profit from transactions • Data- client information • Laptops- shared, used for collecting information • Desktops- shared, used for processing client information • Regional Servers- stores all work activities of employees in region • HQ Server- query regional servers to fulfill transactions

  7. Case StudyExample- Asset Valuations • We will rank the assets on a scale of 1 (Low), 3 (Medium), and 9 (High): • Transaction Revenue: This makes up the total revenue of the service/business. However, since this is a government agency, revenue is not a primary factor— goodwill and confidentiality of data is more important. (3) • Goodwill: This is how the agency is perceived in providing a positive service to other agencies and organizations. This is extremely important. (9) • Data (Liability): Release of any private information can result in liability for the total worth of the company. (9) • Laptops: Total worth of all laptops a lot, but only used for data collection. (1) • Desktops: Total worth of all desktops is a lot, but only used for data processing. (1) • Regional Servers: These hold all of the private client and financial information. (3) • HQ Server: needed to provide the services to the customers in terms of querying for results. This is an important service which leads to goodwill. (3)

  8. Case StudyExample- Vulnerabilities • Vulnerabilities are weaknesses that can be exploited • Vulnerabilities • Laptop Computers • Desktop Computers • Regional Servers • HQ server • Network Infrastructure • Software • Computers and Servers are vulnerable to network attacks such as viruses/worms, intrusion & hardware failures • Laptops are especially vulnerable to theft

  9. Case StudyExample- Threats • Threats are malicious & benign events that can exploit vulnerabilities • Several Threats exist • Hardware Failure • Software Failure • Theft • Denial of Service • Viruses/Worms • Insider Attacks • Intrusion and Theft of Information

  10. Case StudyExample- Controls • Intrusion detection and firewall upgrades on HQ Server • mitigate HQ server failure and recovery • Anti-Virus Software • mitigates threat of worms, viruses, DOS attacks, and some intrusions • Firewall upgrades • mitigates threats of DOS attacks and some intrusions, worms and viruses • Redundant HQ Server • reduces loss of transaction revenue • Spare laptop computers at each location • reduces loss of transaction revenue and productivity • Warranties • reduces loss of transaction revenue and cost of procuring replacements • Insurance • offset cost of liability • Physical Controls • reduce probability of theft • Security Policy • can be used to reduce most threats.

  11. Case StudyAsset/Vulnerability Matrix • For the current example, we will assume this expert opinion for illustration of the concept • Transactions are mostly associated with the regional servers which store the data, the HQ server which takes all requests, and the network infrastructure with which clients access the data. (3) • Laptops, desktops and software is only associated with the collection and processing transactions. (1) • Goodwill is associated with the quality and availability of service provided. Therefore, the HQ server, regional servers, and network infrastructure are very important. (9) • Laptops, desktops, and software are less important to the quality of service- yet still allow for more current information to be accessed which contribute somewhat to goodwill. (3) • Data that is located on laptops and desktops make up only a small percentage of total data because they are only used for collecting and processing. (1) • The regional servers contain all other data. (9) • Other assets are associated highly with their respective vulnerabilities, e.g. laptops with laptops, desktops with desktops, etc. (9)

  12. Case StudyAsset/Vulnerability Matrix, cont’d. 0 – Not Relevant1 – Low 3 – Medium9 – High • Customize matrix to assets & vulnerabilities applicable to case • Determine the value of each asset and put them in the value row • Determine correlation with vulnerability and asset (0 for Not Relevant, 1 for Low, 2 for Medium and 3 for High) • Compute the sum of product of vulnerability & asset values; add to impact column

  13. Case StudyVulnerability/Threat Matrix • For the current example we will assume expert opinion for illustration of the concept: • Laptops will experience hardware failure slightly more often than desktops (1). Regional servers and the HQ server will experience even less hardware failure as there should be more focus on maintenance on these servers (3). Network infrastructure (e.g. switches, routers) will experience failure more often than desktops or laptops as there is no way to easily exchange hardware (9). Hardware failure can cause loss of software, however, our assumption is that all software is replaceable from backups. • Software failure is expected to occur equally throughout the laptops, desktops, regional and HQ servers (3). It is less likely through network infrastructure as there is less software. However, it occurs always through software (9). • We assume that there is high chance of a laptop being stolen (9). Less percentage of a desktop being stolen (3) and even less for the servers to be stolen (1). There is a very low chance of network equipment being stolen since it is kept in secure rooms (1). When equipment is stolen some software may have been stolen as well, but this should not affect much as there are probably backups (0).

  14. Case StudyVulnerability/Threat Matrix, cont’d. • We assume that the denial-of-service can disable machines as well as cause destruction of software (1). Denial-of-service would likely target the servers (3) more than the desktops or laptops (1). • Viruses and worms would be more likely to affect laptops and desktops (3) was they would be more user-controlled and less likely to be patched and protected. The regional servers and HQ server are more secure (1). Viruses and worms tend to exploit some sort of software vulnerability (9). • Insider attacks are primarily meant to exploit data & disable machines. However, these are often perpetrated through laptops and desktops due to accessibility (3). There is slightly less for regional servers although much of the data is located within the regional servers (9). There is less chance for headquarter servers (3). Network infrastructure has a medium percent change of being affected by insider attacks because it is present in all parts of the organization (3). Software also has a chance of being affected by insider attacks (1). • Intrusions are more likely to occur at the user level (9) for desktops and laptops. The regional level would occur less (3) and HQ servers even less (1).

  15. Case StudyVulnerability/Threat Matrix, cont’d. • Complete matrix based on the specific case • Add values from the Impact column of the previous matrix • Determine association between threat and vulnerability • Compute aggregate exposure values by multiplying impact and the associations and adding across vulnerabilities 0 – Not Relevant1 – Low 3 – Medium9 – High

  16. Case StudyThreat/Control Matrix • Some of these controls have threats associated with them. However, these are secondary considerations and we will be focusing on primary threats. • We assume that IDS systems will control some of the DOS attacks (3) and Viruses and Worms (3) and most intrusions (9) • In addition, IDS systems do not impact insider attacks • Anti-Virus Software will prevent most Viruses and Worms, but not all due to virus definition updates (9). • That upgrades to a firewall will greatly control (9) of DOS attacks, as well as Viruses and Worms. It will control some intrusions (3), and about a lower amount of insider attacks and intrusions (1). • A redundant HQ server will control some hardware failure (when the original HQ server fails) (1). This is the same for theft and insider attacks (1). Also, a redundant HQ server will help a lot in cases of DOS attacks on the HQ server (9). This would also assist when software fails or viruses or worms affect the machine (3). • Spare laptops will assist in cases of theft of laptops (3) and somewhat (1) in all cases of hardware and software failure and denial of service.

  17. Case StudyThreat/Control Matrix, cont’d. • We assume that warranties will help with a lot (9) with of both hardware failure and software failure. While it will assist with the cost of new hardware or software, will not reduce employee time. • It is determined that insurance will be able to control most impact from the threats of theft, DOS attacks, Virus/Worm attacks, Insider Attacks, and Intrusion (9). • Physical controls (locks, key cards, biometrics, etc.) will control much theft (9) and a small amount of insider attacks (1) • Also, it is assumed that a security policy will assist with some of all threats since every policy can have procedures which can assist in prevention. • Customize matrix based on the specific case • Add values from the threat importance column of the previous matrix • Determine impact of different controls on different threats • Compute the sum of the products of the threat importance by the impact of controls to determine values.

  18. Case StudyThreat/Control Matrix, cont’d.

  19. Case StudyExercise • Given the matrices and the example case provided, use this same methodology in application to determine the information security risk in your own organization.

More Related