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Incident Management & Forensics The Workshop for Cool People!. Date: 3 rd May, 2008. Hosted by: Neil Hare-Brown MSc CISA CISSP MBCS CITP. Introduction - Who are QCC?.
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Incident Management & ForensicsThe Workshop for Cool People! Date: 3rd May, 2008 • Hosted by: Neil Hare-Brown MSc CISA CISSP MBCS CITP
Introduction - Who are QCC? QCC formed in 1996 to provide expert advice to business and government on information security, risk assessment, incident response, training in computer crime and forensics. • Principals are ex-Met Computer Crime Unit, NHTCU, Ops Tech Support Unit and Military. • Main work concerns incident response and management (inc. computer forensics) and training others to deal with incidents (inc. Info Sec training with Royal Holloway). • Architects of Blackthorn: web-app used by many orgs to manage security incidents, assessments & real-time risk.
Current Incident Hype? What do we know about incidents? • Lets face it: Incidents are sexy! • Management want to know • The entire workforce wants to know • The media wants to know • So what do we know? • V, little?? • Most organisations do not record security incidents with any detail • Information is often lost amongst service incident stats • Industry surveys cannot be that accurate because their source data is flawed
Why Incident Management needs to be Improved! Further compounded is.. • Most incidents are managed as ‘unique events’ • Response often involves different people each time • We learn very little from them • We find it hard to give management any meaningful stats • Incident data (our risk experience) is not cross-correlated into our risk analysis so we don’t know if what we expected (and told management) was what we experienced! • We therefore find it very hard/impossible to show ROSI and justify our control recommendations • The business decides/has to accept the risk with no empirical data: it’s like car insurers covering you with no RTA data..whooah! Heavy Premiums!
Interesting Approaches (so far) The Trouble with Stove Piping! • Like other areas of security, R&D in this area has been particularly polar; examples: CERTs (IT Sec), NISCC (InfoSec), Civil Contingencies Secretariat (Physical) • How many types of incident exist in just one of these areas exclusively? • Nearly all incidents need (for effective response) a blend of expertise from across [and sometimes external to] an organisation. CPNI recognise and have aligned to this! • There is a need to view more holistic in detecting, recording, managing and learning from security incidents • There are techniques and expertise that are required depending on the incident type i.e. Digital Forensics
Digital Forensics Discover the “Smoking Gun” of the hi-tech world • Where might you need DF? • Types of incident • Location, location, location • DF and the law • What to look for and expect from a competent DF supplier • What to do when you think you might need DF • Standards & best practice
Why My Workshop?? Come on – you know you want it! • Understand how to break the problem down and SOLVE IT! • Get cool reference to standards/best practice & tools • Learn how to close the virtuous circle of security risk management • Determine the metrics and information (and expertise) that could be securely shared to enable WARPs to manage incidents effectively and drive risk down • Be “In with the In Crowd” • Go where the “In Crowd” goes…. • …to the Incident Management & Forensics workshop!
COME ON! neilhb@qcc.co.uk Neil Hare-Brown +44 (0)207 353 9000 www.qccis.com