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Incident Object Description and Exchange Format

Incident Object Description and Exchange Format . TF-CSIRT IODEF Editorial Group Jimmy Arvidsson <Jimmy.J.Arvidsson@telia.se> Andrew Cormack <Andrew.Cormack@ukerna.ac.uk> Yuri Demchenko <demch@terena.nl> Jan Meijer <jan.meijer@surfnet.nl>. Agenda. IETF IDWG IDMEF Documents IODEF Documents

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Incident Object Description and Exchange Format

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  1. Incident Object Description and Exchange Format TF-CSIRT IODEF Editorial Group Jimmy Arvidsson <Jimmy.J.Arvidsson@telia.se> Andrew Cormack <Andrew.Cormack@ukerna.ac.uk> Yuri Demchenko <demch@terena.nl> Jan Meijer <jan.meijer@surfnet.nl>

  2. Agenda • IETF IDWG IDMEF Documents • IODEF Documents • Discussion of IODEF Requirements Draft • IODEF Model • How to proceed? • Evidence Collection and Archiving • Draft-ietf-grip-prot-evidence-01.txt • TF-CSIRT interest? Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  3. IDMEF Documents • Currently on the IETF IDWG std process • IDMEF Requirements • IDMEF Data Model • IDMEF XML DTD • IMDEF ANS.1 MIBII format • Intrusion Alert Protocol • IDMEF is for Intrusion Detection Systems • Root element – Alert • Short life history • Data collected automatically Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  4. Incident Taxonomy and Classification WG at TF-CSIRT - History • Incident Taxonomy and Classification • BoF and Seminar at 3rd CERT-COORD meeting in Vienna • i-taxonomy@terena.nl mailing list • IODEF BoF at 12th FIRST • 30 attendees • iodef@terena.nl established • Talks to IETF GRIP and IDWG at IETF-48 • Under discussion • IODEF documents – to be finalised • Discussion, contribution • Implementations • New or coordinated Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  5. IODEF Documents • Best Current Practice on Incident classification and reporting schemes. • Version 1. • Incident Object Description and Exchange Format Requirements • Draft Version 02. • Incident Object Data Model • To be drafted • Incident Object Elements Description and XML Data Type Description (XML DTD) • To be drafted Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  6. Incident Object Description and Exchange Format Requirements - Draft Version 02 • 1. Abstracts • 2. Conventions used in this document • 3. Introduction 3.1. Rationale 3.2. Incident Description Terms • 4. General Requirements • 5. Description Format • 6. Communications Mechanisms Requirements • 7. Message Contents • 8. Incident Identifiers and Incident Identifiers Definition Process • 9. Reference Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  7. 3.2. Incident Description Terms • Event • Evidence • Vulnerability • CSIRT • Incident • Attack • Damage • Impact • Attacker • Target • Victim • Other terms: • alert, activity, IDS, Security Policy, etc. Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  8. 4. General Requirements • 4.1. The IODEF shall reference and use previously published RFCs where possible. Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  9. 5. Description Format • 5.1. IODEF format shall support full internationalization and localization. • 5.2. The format of IODEF must support filtering and/or aggregation of data. • 5.3. IODEF must support the application of an access restriction policy attribute to every element. Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  10. 6. Communications Mechanisms Requirements • 6.1. IODEF exchange will normally be initiated by humans using standard communication protocols, for example, e-mail, WWW/HTTP, LDAP. Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  11. 7. Message Contents • 7.1. The root element of the IO description should contain a unique identification number, IO purpose and default permission level •  7.2. The content of IODEF description should contain the type of the attack if it is known. • It is expected that this type will be drawn from a standardized list of events; a new type of event may use a temporary implementation-specific type if the event type has not yet been standardized. • 7.3. The IODEF description must be structured such that any relevant advisories, such as those from CERT/CC, CVE, can be referenced. • 7.4. IODEF may include a detailed description of attack that caused the current Incident. • 7.5. The IODEF description must include or be able to reference additional detailed data related to this specific underlying event(s)/activity, often referred as evidence. Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  12. 7. Message Contents - Continue • 7.6. The IODEF description MUST contain the description of the attacker and victim. • 7.7. The IODEF description must support the representation of different types of device addresses, e.g., IP address (version 4 or 6) and Internet name. Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  13. 7. Message Contents - Continue • 7.8. IODEF must include the Identity of the creator of the Incident Object (CSIRT or other authority). This may be the sender in an information exchange or the team currently handling the incident. • 7.9. The IODEF description must contain an indication of the possible impact of this event on the target. • 7.10. The IODEF must be able to state the degree of confidence which the originator has in the report information. • 7.11. The IODEF description must provide information about the actions taken in the course of this incident by previous CSIRTs Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  14. 7. Message Contents - Continue • 7.12. The IODEF must support reporting of the time of all stages along Incident life-time. • 7.13. Time shall be reported as the local time and time zone offset from UTC. • (Note: See RFC 1902 for guidelines on reporting time.) • 7.14. The format for reporting the date must be compliant with all current standards for Year 2000 rollover, and it must have sufficient capability to continue reporting date values past the year 2038. • 7.15. Time granularity in IO time parameters shall not be specified by the IODEF. Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  15. 7. Message Contents - Continue • 7.16. The IODEF should support confidentiality of the message content. • The selected design should be capable of supporting a variety of encryption algorithms and must be adaptable to a wide variety of environments. • 7.17. The IODEF should ensure the integrity of the message content. • The selected design should be capable of supporting a variety of integrity mechanisms and must be adaptable to a wide variety of environments. •  7.18. The IODEF should ensure the authenticity and non-repudiation of the message content. Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  16. 7. Message Contents - Continue • 7.19. The IODEF description must support an extension mechanism which may be used by implementers. This allows future implementation-specific or experimental data. • 7.20. The semantics of the IODEF description must be well defined. Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  17. Incident Object Data Model Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  18. IODEF std process – How to proceed? • Best Current Practice on Incident classification and reporting schemes. • Version 1 • Go to std/i-d? • Incident Object Description and Exchange Format Requirements • Draft Version 02 • Ready to submit to IETF – GRIP or IDWG or new WG? • Incident Object Data Model • To be drafted – currently just chart • Incident Object Elements Description and XML Data Type Description (XML DTD) • To be drafted • Evidence Collection and Archiving Format Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  19. Evidence Collection and Archiving draft-ietf-grip-prot-evidence-01.txt • 2. Guiding Principles during Evidence Collection 2.1. Order or volatility 2.2. Things to avoid • 3. The collection procedure 3.1. Transparency 3.2. Collection steps • 4. The Archiving Procedure 4.1. Chain of Custody 4.2. The Archive • 5. Tools you’ll need Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  20. Evidence Collection and ArchivingThe collection procedure • Collection steps • Where is the evidence? • Establish what is likely to be relevant and admissable • For each system obtain the relevant list of volatility • Remove the external avenue for change • Collect the evidence • Document each step • Consider cryptographically signing • Keep not changing Evidence • Have a forensic CD with necessary SW Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  21. Evidence Collection and ArchivingThe Archiving Procedure • Chain of custody – what need to be documented • Where, when and by whom was the evidence discovered • Where, when and by whom was the evidence handled or examined • Who had custody of the evidence, during what period. How was it stored • When the evidence changed custody, when and how did the transfer occur (include shipping number, etc.) • Access to evidence should extremely limited, and should be clearly documented. Incident object Description and Exchange Format

  22. Evidence Collection and Archivingdraft-ietf-grip-prot-evidence-01.txt • Problems of current I-D • No common format defined • Needs some study of local legislation • Privacy and re-enforcement • How can we contribute • Comment on I-D • Propose Evidence description format • New document? Incident object Description and Exchange Format

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