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You Directory Has Been Breached!

You Directory Has Been Breached!. Dmitry Kagansky. Chief Technology Officer, Federal. May 30, 2012. Now what?. Your Directory Has Been Breached.

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You Directory Has Been Breached!

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  1. You Directory Has Been Breached! Dmitry Kagansky Chief Technology Officer, Federal May 30, 2012 Now what?

  2. Your Directory Has Been Breached In today's constantly hostile online environment, hacks and compromises are almost inevitable. When an attacker makes their way into your network, they can stay undetected for days and weeks. -- and the systems most threatened are the systems that are most critical; databases, email and Active Directory. However, there are preventative measures you can take to decrease the chance of compromise, or remediate your situation if a breach occurs. Join Quest Software in a presentation on both preventative measures and remediation techniques to survive a network compromise.

  3. Credit Where Credit Is Due • The next 4 slides were shamelessly taken from Scott Culp’s presentation • Managing Risk in Today’s Cyber Threat Environment • Scott Culp, Principal Security Architect, Microsoft • Originally presented at the 2012 Microsoft Public Sector CIO Summit

  4. Begin at the beginning • How did it happen? • Most likely culprits:

  5. Persistence Common Return Vectors

  6. Pass The Hash • Domain Privileged Servers • Where thepower is • Line of Business Servers • Where theassets are • Workstations • Where theaccess is

  7. Preventative Measures • If you’re confident you’re still “sterile,” here are things you can easily do on an on-going basis to stay that way: • Know What Matters • Focus on your key systems, users, data. • Get Current, Stay Current • Deploy Windows 7, Office 2010, Acrobat Reader X, Java 6; keep them patched. • Start Secure, Stay Secure • Configure security using SCM; maintain it & monitor it; independently test it. • Isolate Key Credentials • Use Standard User for Workstations. Isolate privileged credentials. • Employ the SDL • Employ the Security Development Lifecycle for in-house apps, especially web apps. • But if you’re not confident, or you know you’ve been breached . . .

  8. Steel yourself . . . This is not going to be pretty • You have to migrate • Yes, I said migrate

  9. Why Are We Here? “Once you realized your directory was ‘owned’ the only way you will feel secure again is to migrate your data to a new directory on new servers." – Anonymous Customer, Sr. AD Architect

  10. High Level Overview • Have a destination prepared • Have as much moved over as possible • Users • Groups • Prepare a Services Priority List • Be ready to copy what cannot be moved ahead of time • Computers • Services • Resources • Have tools at the ready • You WILL have an outage • Do NOT grant any rights to anyone without a thorough review process

  11. Have a Destination Prepared • You can set up AD in a VM ahead of time • create a new domain • Have only the single ‘Administrator’ user with any rights • Start to actively monitor this new instance • Map all users • Create an “old to new” map – MS Excel, MS Access, CSV, etc. • For convenience, add old & new SIDs to the map if you can • Secure the map • Review the map on an on-going basis • Copy all distribution groups • Group Membership is suspect, and should probably not be copied • Copy all security groups • Group Membership is compromised, and must notbe copied

  12. Prepare the Services Priority List • Determine what is most important • Involve the business owners • Document “service interactions” • SQL, IIS and what level of privileges are needed for all apps • Email may not be mentioned but assume it to be first priority • Mobile devices (even Blackberries) should be last • Yes, I know people want their data, but this is a potential entry point

  13. Have Tools Prepared • Many vendors have what you need however . . . • No one (not even my employer) has a single package for this • Be comfortable with PowerShell • If you don’t have any 3rd party tools, this will be the only way to go unless you only have 20 users in your domain • Everything that is necessary can be scripted • Have the scripts ready

  14. During the move • Copy what cannot be moved ahead of time • Computers • Services • Resources • All objects are suspect • Treat them the same as compromised user objects • Do not blindly add them to groups • Look at directory sync tools • Microsoft • Quest

  15. You WILL Have An Outage • Prepare your users - let them know • They’ll need to reset their passwords • Some apps & services will not be available, especially after the initial move • Size determines speed • Risk determines speed • A few days to a few weeks • It will take a day or two to copy everything over • It will take weeks to get everything back in place • Security groups MUST go through a review process • Involve the business owners

  16. Credit Where Credit Is Due • Slides 3 - 6 taken from Scott Culp’s presentation • Managing Risk in Today’s Cyber Threat Environment • Scott Culp, Principal Security Architect, Microsoft • Originally presented at the 2012 Microsoft Public Sector CIO Summit • There is a corresponding white paper out on June 4th • Robert Bobel (bob@activefolder.com) is the original co-author of the white paper and much of this presentation is based on his original draft

  17. Wrap-up • Contact Information • Dmitry Kagansky • Email: dmitry.kagansky@quest.com • Twitter: @dimikagi • Blog: http://www.federalcto.com/ • Supporting Whitepaper (Available June 4, 2012) • http://www.federalcto.com/quest/breached-directory.docx • http://tinyurl.com/re-establishAD • AD Landing page • http://www.federalcto.com/2012/05/breached/ • These slides • http://www.federalcto.com/quest/breached-directory.pptx

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