Book Image

Mastering Cyber Intelligence

By : Jean Nestor M. Dahj
Book Image

Mastering Cyber Intelligence

By: Jean Nestor M. Dahj

Overview of this book

The sophistication of cyber threats, such as ransomware, advanced phishing campaigns, zero-day vulnerability attacks, and advanced persistent threats (APTs), is pushing organizations and individuals to change strategies for reliable system protection. Cyber Threat Intelligence converts threat information into evidence-based intelligence that uncovers adversaries' intents, motives, and capabilities for effective defense against all kinds of threats. This book thoroughly covers the concepts and practices required to develop and drive threat intelligence programs, detailing the tasks involved in each step of the CTI lifecycle. You'll be able to plan a threat intelligence program by understanding and collecting the requirements, setting up the team, and exploring the intelligence frameworks. You'll also learn how and from where to collect intelligence data for your program, considering your organization level. With the help of practical examples, this book will help you get to grips with threat data processing and analysis. And finally, you'll be well-versed with writing tactical, technical, and strategic intelligence reports and sharing them with the community. By the end of this book, you'll have acquired the knowledge and skills required to drive threat intelligence operations from planning to dissemination phases, protect your organization, and help in critical defense decisions.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Cyber Threat Intelligence Life Cycle, Requirements, and Tradecraft
7
Section 2: Cyber Threat Analytical Modeling and Defensive Mechanisms
13
Section 3: Integrating Cyber Threat Intelligence Strategy to Business processes

Intelligence-based DevSecOps high-level architecture

A logical analysis of threat vectors, controls, and surfaces must be conducted and communicated when designing a secure application. Software applications can become complex with time or business needs. And the more complex the application, the more techniques, tools, and resources are required to secure it. Therefore, a CTI analyst should have a blueprint of the security architecture – to understand how the application components fit together. They must also understand its context. Most security architectures concentrate on defense against cyberattacks – security hardening. The designer configures and integrates control methods that neutralize cyber threats. Security hardening gives more control to the system – once the deployment and configurations are completed, the application is expected to detect, stop, quarantine, or delete threats. However, security hardening is not enough for system and application protection...