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Enterprise Threat Management (ETM): Bringing Security Together Through Intelligence

Enterprise Threat Management (ETM): Bringing Security Together Through Intelligence. David Thomason Director of Security Engineering. X. X. X. X. X. X. X. X. X. Look Familiar? The Agony of Today’s Network Security. Undetected Attacks

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Enterprise Threat Management (ETM): Bringing Security Together Through Intelligence

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  1. Enterprise Threat Management (ETM): Bringing Security Together Through Intelligence David Thomason Director of Security Engineering

  2. X X X X X X X X X Look Familiar? The Agony of Today’s Network Security Undetected Attacks According to ComputerWorld Magazine, the TJX security breach, that was reported in mid-December of 2006 and could put the credit and debit card data of more than40 million customers at risk, was not detected for seven months. Outsider Attacks According to the 2006 Ponemon Data Breach Study,those surveyed who experienced data theft in the last year spent an average of$660,000to notify customers, business partners, and regulators. Insider Malicious Attacks In a survey jointly done by ASIS International and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, 138 executives of Fortune 1000 companies reported losses between$53billion and $59 billiondue to insider attacks. Insider Accidental Attacks In an FBI Computer Crime Survey released on 1/11/07, 44%of participants said they were attacked from within their own organizations. Unknown Connections The most recent CSI/FBI Crime Computer and Security Survey reports that 66% of the security incidents that caused the greatest organizational losses were unauthorized access and theft of proprietary information. Compliance Enforcement According to John Hagerty of AMR Research, “…it [automated compliance] also comes down to an issue of visibility. Where do I have problems? Where do I have exposure? That’s when it starts to become a more strategic issue because management is asking for an overall view of this.”

  3. Security spending is dramatically growing as a percentage of the overall IT budget… In fact, it is growing twice as fast as overall IT spending (12% vs. 6%)… Source: 2006 CIO/CSO/PWC State of Info Security Survey Yet the threats and vulnerabilities keep coming! Current Security Spending Trends:Unsustainable Growth

  4. What’s Going on Here? • The awareness of the problem is there • Billions of dollars have been spent on IT security • The security problem is getting worse as attackers become more motivated. Today’s professional hacker does not want his work to be noticed. The TJX security breach (T.J. Maxx stores) – disclosed in 12/06 – was one of the largest in retail history and went undetected for seven months! • How is it possible for so many security technologies to be defeated? • The silo approach of “see a threat, buy a box” is no longer feasible.

  5. “By the end of 2007, 75% of enterprises will be infected with undetected, financially motivated, targeted malware that evaded their traditional perimeter and host defenses. The threat environment is changing — financially motivated, targeted attacks are increasing, and automated malware-generation kits allow simple creation of thousands of variants quickly —but our security processes and technologies haven't kept up.” Gartner's Top Predictions for IT Organizations and users, 2007 and Beyond Key Flaws in Current Network Security • Network security technology operates with virtually no knowledge about what it’s protecting • Virtually all network securitytechnology is driven solely by people • These factors combine to lead to network defenses that are misconfigured, porous, and static

  6. Security Events Must Have Context Is this guy a threat? Or a valued customer? Is he holding a gun? Or an iPod? Is it summer in Sydney? Or winter in New York? Do you reach to set off the alarm? Or to shake his hand? Unfortunately, the majority of network solutions today lack the ability to integrate intelligence into the real-time analysis of potential threats.

  7. Intrusion Prevention Vulnerability Assessment Threat Endpoint Network Intelligence Network Behavior Analysis (NBA) Network Access Control (NAC) Introducing Enterprise Threat Management (ETM)

  8. Protection Against Worms Trojans Port scans Buffer overflow attacks Spyware Protocol anomalies Malformed traffic Invalid headers Zero-day attacks The Role of Intrusion Prevention • Vulnerability-based Intrusion Prevention • First line of ETM defense • IPS rules should address the “vulnerability”—not the “exploit” • Protection against zero-day attacks • IPS events should be correlated against endpoint intelligence • IPS is just one part of an effective ETM strategy

  9. Scan occurs Accuracy decay Quality t - Coherence time t Time The Role of Vulnerability Assessment • “Active” Endpoint Intelligence • Popular source for obtaining endpoint and vulnerability intelligence • Provides a rich “snapshot” of endpoint assets and vulnerabilities • Intelligence degrades in between active scans • Active scanning can be “harmful” to some hosts

  10. The Role of Network Behavior Analysis (NBA) • “Passive” Endpoint Intelligence • Compliments “rich” intelligence gained by active scanning • 24x7 monitoring for endpoint assets and vulnerabilities • Analogous to passive SONAR—learn by listening • Network Anomaly Detection • Create a baseline of “normal” network behavior • Identify propagation of attacks that “walked” through the front door

  11. The Role of Network Access Control (NAC) • Pre-connect NAC • Dominated by Cisco Network Admission Control (CNAC) & Microsoft Network Access Protection (MNAP) standards • Useful for determining “who” can get on the ride • Post-connect NAC • Useful for determining “what” you can do once you’re on the ride • Set compliance policies related to usage of operating systems, services, apps, resources, etc. • Identifies policy and regulatory non-compliance

  12. Tying It All Together • Integrated ETM Console • Monitor for security events originating from both inside and outside the organization • Correlate threat, endpoint, and network intelligence • Threat intelligence from IPS • Endpoint intelligence from VA & NBA • Network intelligence from NBA • Drastically reduce false positives and negatives • Monitor for compliance with IT policies related to company, industry and/or government regulatory compliance • Compliance monitoring through post-connect NAC

  13. BEFORE ANATTACK DURING ANATTACK AFTER ANATTACK Everything on the network The Attack Where the Attack Occurred Policy Violations and Vulnerabilities What Action to Take The Impact By Hardening Assets By Blockingand Alerting By Minimizingthe Impact ETM—Before, During & After the Attack

  14. Sourcefire 3D System™ BEFORE ANATTACK DURING ANATTACK AFTER ANATTACK Everything on the network The Attack Where theAttack Occurred Policy Violations and Vulnerabilities What Actionto Take The Impact By Hardening Assets By Blockingand Alerting By Minimizingthe Impact “Providing endpoint and network intelligence to network security products significantly improves their capabilities...” Use Endpoint Intelligence to Improve Security Defenses Report Sourcefire’s Approach to ETM INTELLIGENCE LAYER D I S C O V E R D E T E R M I N E D E F E N D

  15. ETM—a Better, More Efficient Process • Organizations need systems that can analyze security information and apply context automatically and holistically. Most security technologies are driven by a man-in-the loop process. • How do you know when to update your access control configuration? • How do you know when a new vulnerability is relevant to your environment? • How do you know when there is an active, high priority security event occurring in your environment? • How do you know when the patch management system needs to address a new host? • This information is then turned into response manually • Persistent, automatic intelligence generation and analysis driving network security to: REAL-TIME, UNIFIED, NETWORK DEFENSE

  16. ETM Benefits Summary • Enjoy continuous protection through an integrated approach. The whole truly is greater than the sum of the parts—reduce number of vendors, reduce cost of ownership • Get faster and more accurate response from threat, endpoint, and network intelligence—the keys to driving next-generation security technologies that are automated and adaptive • Take advantage of consolidated reporting and management views • Enforce compliance of security policies and industry regulations as part of overall network protection

  17. ETM Take-away ETM leverages real-time intelligence about the network environment and drives it into network security technologies for a more effective and efficient security solution.

  18. Questions?

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