Book Image

CompTIA CASP+ CAS-004 Certification Guide

By : Mark Birch
Book Image

CompTIA CASP+ CAS-004 Certification Guide

By: Mark Birch

Overview of this book

CompTIA Advanced Security Practitioner (CASP+) ensures that security practitioners stay on top of the ever-changing security landscape. The CompTIA CASP+ CAS-004 Certification Guide offers complete, up-to-date coverage of the CompTIA CAS-004 exam so you can take it with confidence, fully equipped to pass on the first attempt. Written in a clear, succinct way with self-assessment questions, exam tips, and mock exams with detailed explanations, this book covers security architecture, security operations, security engineering, cryptography, governance, risk, and compliance. You'll begin by developing the skills to architect, engineer, integrate, and implement secure solutions across complex environments to support a resilient enterprise. Moving on, you'll discover how to monitor and detect security incidents, implement incident response, and use automation to proactively support ongoing security operations. The book also shows you how to apply security practices in the cloud, on-premises, to endpoints, and to mobile infrastructure. Finally, you'll understand the impact of governance, risk, and compliance requirements throughout the enterprise. By the end of this CASP study guide, you'll have covered everything you need to pass the CompTIA CASP+ CAS-004 certification exam and have a handy reference guide.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
1
Section 1: Security Architecture
6
Section 2: Security Operations
11
Section 3: Security Engineering and Cryptography
16
Section 4: Governance, Risk, and Compliance

Network management and monitoring tools

In this section, we will look at some of the challenges that need to be considered when managing an enterprise network. In particular, we must protect networking services and equipment from unauthorized changes and ensure traffic can flow across our networks.

Alert definitions and rule writing

It is important that rules used by our advanced network protection devices do not cause unnecessary blockages or allow our networks to be overwhelmed by unwanted/malicious traffic. If rules are implemented poorly, then we may see a high number of false positives, meaning the traffic is benign (non-threatening). False negatives will mean the traffic was considered harmless when in fact it is malicious.

Tuning alert thresholds is an important step. An example could be auditing for anomalous file access to a storage device containing a mixture of data with different classification labels. You want to log all read and write access to customer records with an alert being generated for Move or Copy actions. However, if you set this rule up for all data directories, including non-sensitive data, then you may be overwhelmed by unnecessary alerts.

Eventually, your SOC staff will experience alert fatigue, meaning they may well dismiss important security events.