Book Image

Practical Threat Detection Engineering

By : Megan Roddie, Jason Deyalsingh, Gary J. Katz
5 (2)
Book Image

Practical Threat Detection Engineering

5 (2)
By: Megan Roddie, Jason Deyalsingh, Gary J. Katz

Overview of this book

Threat validation is an indispensable component of every security detection program, ensuring a healthy detection pipeline. This comprehensive detection engineering guide will serve as an introduction for those who are new to detection validation, providing valuable guidelines to swiftly bring you up to speed. The book will show you how to apply the supplied frameworks to assess, test, and validate your detection program. It covers the entire life cycle of a detection, from creation to validation, with the help of real-world examples. Featuring hands-on tutorials and projects, this guide will enable you to confidently validate the detections in your security program. This book serves as your guide to building a career in detection engineering, highlighting the essential skills and knowledge vital for detection engineers in today's landscape. By the end of this book, you’ll have developed the skills necessary to test your security detection program and strengthen your organization’s security measures.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction to Detection Engineering
5
Part 2: Detection Creation
11
Part 3: Detection Validation
14
Part 4: Metrics and Management
16
Part 5: Detection Engineering as a Career

Threat intelligence overview

Before we look at its role in detection engineering, we must understand what threat intelligence is. Cyber-threat intelligence is data collected and analyzed in order to understand the context related to emerging or existing threats. It can help us understand a threat actor’s motives; targets; tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs); and more. This in turn can help us understand how we can detect such threats. At the simplest level, threat intelligence may be provided in the form of indicators. For example, URLHaus by AbuseDB includes lists of malicious URLs that can be accessed by API: https://urlhaus.abuse.ch/downloads/text/. There are many open source feeds that will provide a list of known malicious indicators without context. Even at this level, we have the potential to use our intel to develop detections, even if it’s just a simple detection for the presence of a value from the list. The major downside to using indicators from threat...