Lesson 12 Preparing for Incident Response and the Investigative Process

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Lesson 12 Preparing for Incident Response and the Investigative Process

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Lesson 12 Preparing for Incident Response and the Investigative Process. Overview. Preparing for Incident Response Investigative Guidelines. Ranum on Forensics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Lesson 12 Preparing for Incident Response and the Investigative Process

Lesson 12Preparing for Incident Response

and the Investigative Process

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Overview

• Preparing for Incident Response

• Investigative Guidelines

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Ranum on Forensics

• “The real value of intrusion detection is diagnosing what is going on…never collect more data than you could conceivably want to look at. If you don’t know what to do with the data, it doesn’t matter how much you’ve got.”

Marcus Ranum

Network Flight Recorder

Preparing for Incident Response

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Identify Vital Assets

• What can damage your organization the most?

• What concerns you?

• Who could be a threat?

• Do hackers concern you?

This step saves you time & $ later

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Preparing Systems

• Record cryptographic checksums of critical files (MD5)– Tripwire is widely accepted commercial product

• Increase or enable secure audit logging

• Build up your host’s defenses

• Backup critical data and store media securely

• Educate users about security

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Critical File Preparation

• Cryptographic checksums or Message Digest (MD)– Basically a digital signature

• MD5 creates a 128-bit checksum from a large file

• System Administrator can create checksum of critical file (use separate media) then compare against subsequent MD5 runs

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Unix Auditing

Turn on system logging– /var/log/syslog– Create Central Syslog server

• run syslogd -r

– Enable Process Accounting• Tracks the command each user executes

– accton command

– /usr/lib/acct/startup

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Windows Auditing

• By default security auditing is not enabled

• NT: Start|Programs|Administrative Tools| User Manager– User Manager select Policies|Audit– Logs => C:\WINNT\System32\Config\*.evt

• WIN2K: Administrative Tools| Local Security Policy– Logs => C:\WINNT\System32\Config\*.evt

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Other Steps

• Application Logging

• Backup Critical Data– Unix: dump, restor, cpio, tar & dd– WIN2K: Start|Programs|Accessories| System

Utilities| Backup– NT: NT Backup (NT Resources Kit)– WIN98: Start|Accessories| System Utilities| Backup

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Network Preparations

• Know your network: document, document, document– hardware, software, users

• Smart topology/architecture

• Use access control list (ACL) on router

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Network Preparations-contd

• Require authentication (host, network, kerberos, IPsec)

• Audit regularly (manpower intensive)

• Use network time protocol (NTP) to synchronize all events

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Organizational Preparations

• Institute comprehensive policies

• Institute comprehensive procedures

• Develop response procedures– Firedrills?

• Create a response toolkit

• Establish an Incident Response Team

• Obtain top-level management support– Agree to ground rules/ rules of engagement

Often overlooked

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Response Toolkits

• High-end processor w/lots of memory• Large IDE and SCSI drives• Backup storage: CD-RW and Tape Drives• Spare cables• Router/Hub and network interface card• Digital camera• Trusted software

ref: www.computer-forensics.com

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Establish Incident Response Team

• Technical experts

• Management POC

• Team leader/principal investigator

• Decide on mission/goal

“Critical thinking team players who enjoy hardwork and long hours”

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

IR Professional Organizations

Training• WWW.SANS.ORG

• WWW.FOUNDSTONE.COM

• WWW.CERT.ORG

Organizations• Information Sharing and

Analysis Centers (ISACs)

• InfraGard

• High Tech Investigation Association

• Information Systems Security Association (ISSA)

• Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams (FIRST)

Investigative Guidelines

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Investigative Guidelines

• Initial assessment

• Incident notification checklist

• Investigating

• Formulating Response Strategy

Initial assessment not always accurate

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Initial Assessment

• What probably happened?– Uncertainty regins– Each situation unique– Need to learn enough to determine course of action

• What is the best response strategy?– Does it meet pre-established goals/ROEs?– Does it have management support?– Will your team need outside help?

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Incident Notification Checklist

• WWW.CERT.ORG

• Collect network maps and know architecture

• Verify corporate policies– Many actions can only be taken if appropriate

policies exist

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Investigating the Incident

• Prime directive: DO NO HARM

• Personnel interviews

• Hands-on activities

• Many suspected incidents turn into non-events

• Will the investigation do more damage than the incident itself?

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Investigating the Incident-contd

• Personnel interviews– System administrators: logs– Managers: know workforce, critical data– End-users

• Taking hands-on actions– Step carefully– My contaminate “crime scene”

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Formulate Response Strategy

• Declare Incident

• Restore Normal Operations?– Off-line recovery– On-line recovery

• Determine public relations play– “To spin or not to spin?”

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Formulate Response Strategy-contd

• Determine probable attacker– Internal: handle internally– External: prosecute?

• Determine Type of Attack– DOS, Theft, Vandalism, Policy violation, ongoing

intrusion

• Classify victim system– Critical server/application?– # of users?

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Closing Thought

• “The biggest problem for 2001 was keeping servers running MS-Windows products properly patched. We have numerous servers, and it’s constant fight to keep up with the patch level and test to confirm that the new patch doesn’t break something. This is the same problem for 2002.”

• J.G.

• Peace of mind depends on the action plan for response.

UTSA IS 6973 Incident Response

Summary

• Prepare for Incidents• Build a good team• Rehearse/Practice procedures• Perform initial assessment• Formulate response• Do No Harm