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POC: Wayne Campbell 402-293-3967 campbell_wayne@prc

Traditional Indications and Warnings for Host Based Intrusion Detection. POC: Wayne Campbell 402-293-3967 campbell_wayne@prc.com. Intrusion Detection Systems. Network Based external threat commonly used Host Based internal threat 2% of corporate America uses

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POC: Wayne Campbell 402-293-3967 campbell_wayne@prc

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  1. Traditional Indications and Warnings for Host Based Intrusion Detection POC: Wayne Campbell 402-293-3967 campbell_wayne@prc.com

  2. Intrusion Detection Systems • Network Based • external threat • commonly used • Host Based • internal threat • 2% of corporate America uses • FBI survey - 86% had attacks by employees

  3. Network Based IDS • Packet Sniffer • Signature or scenario based • historical protection • updated frequently • Limited historical evidence

  4. Host Based IDS • Site specific • up front work required • Analysis of audit or log data • Real time or batch analysis • Distributed processing

  5. Indication and Warning Methodology • Developed by military organizations • Used to predict aggression by an enemy • extensive historical analysis • current trend analysis • Repository of significant events

  6. I&W Recent History • Cold War • United States Development • sophisticated alert system for tracking • determination of critical events • Continuous analysis by experts • events and possible actions • prioritized and weigh events

  7. I &W Warnings • Multiple indicators are required to be triggered • sequence of events is irrelevant • indicators could set higher level indicators • Warnings of potential • prediction, not fact • snap shoot in time, estimate

  8. I &W Warnings (cont'd) • Strategic Decision Makers • experienced analyst • big picture view • Defined/recommended actions • I & W data • supporting data

  9. War on Cyber Crime • Use I&W techniques to predict behavior • Techniques are used in post-attack research • Post-mortem • determine attack characteristics • physical, social engineering, system level • Security Indications and Warnings (SIW)

  10. Security Indications and Warnings • Premise - historical events, can be used as indicators current of activity. • Host-based Intrusion Detection • why? audit log analysis • network based possible • Not scenario matching

  11. Indicators • Event or group of events • Historically important events • Building blocks of SIW • Non-critical events • alone inconsequential • example: large number of prints occurring

  12. Indicators (cont'd) • Hierarchical • lowest level • barriers • boundaries • mid level • gauges (counters) • top level • criteria and indicators

  13. Event Categories • Security Organization • written site policy • derived and stated • Why? Ease of rule generation • Suggested Minimum • Administrative Limited Usage • Role Specific Daily/Routine • Policy Limits

  14. Event Categories (cont'd) • Prioritize events per category • Cost vs. Performance • more events • slower response (volume) • costlier (time/resources) • limited events • threats undetected • balanced, manageable level

  15. Barriers • A computer resource or process that when used, misused or compromised suggest that a security breach or operating system misuse may be occurring or has been attempted. • operating system specific • security relevant • example: .rhosts file

  16. Boundaries • A computer resource or process that when used, misused or compromised indicates that the site’s security policy or normal operating procedures may have been violated. • operating system or application events • defined within site policy • example: accessing a restricted directory

  17. Barriers and Boundaries • Clearly and unambiguously activated • computer trends • level of significance • Response definition • barriers - may require aggressive actions • boundaries - further investigation • Both need to be monitored

  18. Level of Significance • All events are not created equal • weighing occurs naturally • importance defines significance • Site defines and sets • Unique or unusual events • quickly raise attention of security • Example: production vs. development

  19. SIW Approach • Security Policy • Response definition • Categorizing of events • Prioritizing events • Barriers and Boundaries • Rule generation • Levels of significance

  20. Policy Statement #1 • No user shall have direct access to the prices files for job proposal submissions; access to theses files is only permitted via the corporate directed tools. • all price files are in /proposal/prices • corporate tool is PropGen • price files have a “.ppf” extension

  21. Policy Statement #2 • No individual shall be able to assume another user’s identity on any production machine. On development machines, developers may assume the “root” role • IP range of dev. systems 192.12.15.[0-20] • no direct login as root is permitted • “root” can not change to a user’s ID

  22. Policy Statement #3 • No user shall attempt to obtain root or administrative privileges through covert means. • prohibits attempts to get administrative privileges • stolen password • buffer overflows • operating system specific weaknesses

  23. Statement #1 Responses • Assumptions • copying, removing of price file prohibited • reading of price files, except by PropGen is prohibited. • accessing /proposal can be a sign of browsing

  24. Statement #1 Responses (cont'd) • Alert messages • Attempt to copy sensitive price schedules • Attempt to delete sensitive price schedules • Illegal access of the price schedules • Unauthorized browsing of restricted resources

  25. Statement #2 Responses • Assumptions • root log ins are not permitted • Alert messages • Illegal root login • Unauthorized use of su() command • Root assumed a user’s identity • Unauthorized transition to a new user ID

  26. Statement #3 Responses • Assumptions • all acquisition of root privileges should be made known to security personnel • Alert messages • Illegal transition to root (buffer overflow) • Root shell attack has occurred • Undefined root acquisition

  27. Defining Barriers • Knowledgeable of basic system security • vulnerabilities • version specific data • Know your system setup • What have you added? deleted?

  28. Barrier Breakdown • Audit daemon • primary barrier • su() command • used to change effective UID • Login Service • limits user log in capabilities

  29. Barrier Breakdown (cont'd) • /etc/passwd • user information • Development systems • IP address specific • Audit ID • unique identifier

  30. Boundary Breakdown • “ppf” files • contain price schedules • /proposal directory • repository of company sensitive • root privilege • limited to a few individuals • PropGen application

  31. Rule Generation • Limitation of presentation paper • not all rules • not all circumstances • Two step process • initial definition • refinement

  32. Sample Rules • Successful use of su() and “root” login at console • ba2 and ba3(root) • Successful use of su() and you’re not a development machine • ba2 and not ba5

  33. Sample Rules (cont'd) • Successful use of su() and on the development platform and your current ID is not root • (ba2 and ba5) and not ba6(root)

  34. Rule Threshold • Numeric values as levels • Trigger value assumption • ba2 = 5 ba3 = 1 • ba5 = 4 ba6 = 3 • Level of Significance • SF = .25

  35. Refined Equation • ba2 and ba3 => 6 • ba2 and not ba5 => 9 • (ba2 and (ba5*SF)) and not ba6 => 12 • allows 4 su() before alerting on development systems • alert message severity level

  36. Advantages • Proven methodology • Flexibility • levels of significance • prioritization of events • Multiple levels - one to many relation • Attack signature is not required • Historical analysis

  37. Disadvantages • Number of possible enemies to monitor • traditional I&W had a few enemies • SIW has potentially thousands of enemies • System requirements • memory • disk space

  38. Summary • Consistent with IDS requirements • warns of potential attacks • Implementation • manual • automatic • Guidance for security professional

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