Book Image

Cybersecurity – Attack and Defense Strategies - Third Edition

By : Yuri Diogenes, Dr. Erdal Ozkaya
5 (2)
Book Image

Cybersecurity – Attack and Defense Strategies - Third Edition

5 (2)
By: Yuri Diogenes, Dr. Erdal Ozkaya

Overview of this book

Cybersecurity – Attack and Defense Strategies, Third Edition will bring you up to speed with the key aspects of threat assessment and security hygiene, the current threat landscape and its challenges, and how to maintain a strong security posture. In this carefully revised new edition, you will learn about the Zero Trust approach and the initial Incident Response process. You will gradually become familiar with Red Team tactics, where you will learn basic syntax for commonly used tools to perform the necessary operations. You will also learn how to apply newer Red Team techniques with powerful tools. Simultaneously, Blue Team tactics are introduced to help you defend your system from complex cyber-attacks. This book provides a clear, in-depth understanding of attack/defense methods as well as patterns to recognize irregular behavior within your organization. Finally, you will learn how to analyze your network and address malware, while becoming familiar with mitigation and threat detection techniques. By the end of this cybersecurity book, you will have discovered the latest tools to enhance the security of your system, learned about the security controls you need, and understood how to carry out each step of the incident response process.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
18
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19
Index

Introduction to threat intelligence

It was clear in the last chapter that having a strong detection system is imperative for your organization’s security posture. One way to improve this system would be to reduce the noise and number of false positives that are detected. One of the main challenges that you face when you have many alerts and logs to review is that you end up randomly prioritizing – and in some cases, even ignoring – future alerts because you believe it is not worth reviewing them. According to Microsoft’s Lean on the Machine report, an average large organization has to look through 17,000 malware alerts each week, taking on average 99 days for an organization to discover a security breach.

Alert triage usually happens at the Network Operations Center (NOC) level or Security Operations Center (SOC), and delays to triage can lead to a domino effect. This is because if triage fails at this level, the operation will also fail, and in this...