DALLAS RESIDENCY POWERPOINT FILES/5005066_01_04_MM30_ThreatMod.mp4
DALLAS RESIDENCY POWERPOINT FILES/653235_00_03_XR15_Goals_of_Security_474686.mp4
DALLAS RESIDENCY POWERPOINT FILES/653235_01_04_XR15_Control_Frameworks_474686.mp4
DALLAS RESIDENCY POWERPOINT FILES/653235_03_02_XR30_Security_Policies_474686.mp4
DALLAS RESIDENCY POWERPOINT FILES/748579_01_03_XR30_Current_Threats_and_Threat_Models.mp4
DALLAS RESIDENCY POWERPOINT FILES/765324_01_01_XR15_CareersinInformationSecurity.mp4
DALLAS RESIDENCY POWERPOINT FILES/CYBER_503x_Unit_1.pdf
CYBER503x Cybersecurity Risk Management
Unit 1: The Evolving Risk Landscape in Cybersecurity
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Basic Terminologies (1)
• Computer Security • Information Security (InfoSec) • Cyber security • IT Security • Privacy
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Computer Security
• Measures and controls that ensures: • Confidentiality (C) – authorized access and disclosure • Integrity (I) – proper modification or destruction • Availability (A) – timely and reliable access to and use
• For computer system assets including: • Computing hardware devices, such as server machines, PC,
laptop, tablet, mobile phones; • Network devices, such as router, switch; • Embedded software, firmware and operating systems
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Information Security (InfoSec)
• The International Standards Organization (ISO) (2014) defines it as:
• “Preservation of confidentiality, integrity and availability (CIA) of Information.
• In addition, other properties such as authenticity, accountability, non-repudiation and reliability can also be involved.”
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
What is Cybersecurity?
• Many simply defines cybersecurity as a subset of InfoSec since it concerns with the “Information in Cyberspace”.
• But questions are: • What is cyberspace? • What are assets in cyberspace? What about non-information
based assets in cyberspace? • Are there any unique aspects of security in cyberspace? How is
it different from Computer Security and InfoSec?
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Cyberspace
• “Cyberspace is a time-dependent set of interconnected information systems and the humans that interact with these systems”. Ottis and Lorents (2010)
• It is a dynamic, evolving, virtual, connected, multilevel ecosystem of physical infrastructure, software, regulations, processes, and interactions influenced by an expanding population of contributors … who represent the range of human intentions.
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Assets in Cyberspace
• Information itself • Information infrastructure (e.g. Internet, embedded
software, firmware, communication protocols etc.) • Non-Information assets (physical entities connected on
Internet): • Critical infrastructure: energy grid, water supply, public health,
transportation, telecommunications, financial services, etc. • Internet of Things:
• Connected and self-driving vehicles • Connected medical devices • Connected home automation and entertainment systems
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Cybersecurity vs. InfoSec
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Connected Digital
Information
Non-Digital or Non-connected
Information
Things Other Than Information
Information Security (InfoSec)
Cyber Security
Cybersecurity vs. Computer Security
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Devices in Cyberspace
Devices Not Connected in Cyberspace
Things Other Than Information
Computer Security Cyber Security
IT Security
Digital Information
Non-Digital Information
Things Other Than
Information
Information Security (InfoSec)
Cyber Security
Devices in Cyberspace
Devices Not Connected in
Cyberspace
Computer Security
IT Security
Technical & Operational Aspects
IT Security vs. InfoSec
IT Security • Firewalls • Antivirus • Vulnerability Scans • Penetration Testing • Intrusion Detection • Computer Forensics • Access Control • Network Security • System Monitoring • Patch Management • Encryption
Information Security (InfoSec) • Intellectual property • Regulatory compliance • Business/financial integrity • Insider abuse • Industrial espionage • Data Privacy • Governance • Crisis Management • Business Continuity • Risk analysis • Organizational view
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Technology-oriented Business-oriented
Privacy concerns “Personal Information”
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Protection of Personal
Information
• Confidentiality • Integrity • Availability
• Collection • Access • Using & • Disclosing • Data quality • Anonymity
Privacy Security
Personal Information
• Anything that establishes a 1-to-1 relationship • “Telephone book” data may not seems to be particularly
“personal” • Unique identifiers: SSN, IP addresses, user names, etc. • Sensitive data such as personal healthcare records, things you
purchased, web site you visited, known your comings & goings, who you associate with, etc.
• Watch out for combinations of “innocuous” data, “87% of the US population are uniquely identified by {DOB, gender, zip code}”
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Basic Terminologies (2)
• Asset: any valuable thing in the organization • Vulnerability: any weakness of Asset • Threats/Attacks/Adversaries: The potential for an
actor with a certain motive to exercise a specific vulnerability
• Actor: person, organization, government (nation state) • Motivation: publicity, financial, political/religion • Capability: required knowledge, available tools
• Risk: Vulnerability exposed to Threat impacted Asset • Controls/Safeguards: counter-measures to reduce
Risk
The Illustration
Actor
Motivation
Capability
Asset Threat
Vulnerability
Risk
The Evolving Trends
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s Offenses
Defenses
• Virus • Worms • Open Nets • Insecure configs
Anti-Virus Firewalls Security guidelines
• Script Kiddies • Client-side attacks • Automated probes/scans • Too many alerts/logs
SEIM IDS Layered
• APTs • DDoS • Botnet • Phishing • Ransomware
EDR IdAM
increasing frequency & sophistication; more tools, technical knowledge decreasing
Vulnerability Management
Threat Management
Risk Management
Threats Attacks
Adversaries
Controls Safeguards
Age of “Protection” “Detection” “Response”
The Challenges Ahead:
• Increased external threat • Cyber threats multiplying • Disappearing perimeter • Growing attacking power of cyber criminals
• Increased internal pressure • Lack of agility • Lack of budget • Lack of skills • Human beings are still the weakest links
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Top Cyber Threats in 2020s
• The rise of attacks that cause the irreversible harms • The Sony Hack in December 2014, that disclose private and
sensitive information that can’t be pulled back – “confidentiality” under attacked
• Ransomware like WannaCry in May 2017, that encrypted healthcare data and paralyzed operations – “availability” under attacked
• Social engineering will become more prominent • Nearly 50% of alerts and logs never investigated • Dangers from and to the fast emerging AI systems.
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
2020s: Age of Resilience
• Need solutions directly support: • Recovery • Agility • Usability • Automation • Learnability
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
How are these “security” solutions?
• Removing Attacker Persistence • Easier or Automated Anomaly Detection • Built-in Visibility • Design usable security to better mitigate social
engineering attack • Learning to adapt to new attacker patterns
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
The Evolving Trends
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s Offenses
Defenses
• Virus • Worms • Open Nets • Insecure configs
Anti-Virus Firewalls Security guidelines
• Script Kiddies • Client-side attacks • Automated probes/scans • Too many alerts/logs
SEIM IDS Layered
• APTs • DDoS • Botnet • Phishing • Ransomware
EDR IdAM
increasing frequency & sophistication; more tools, technical knowledge decreasing
Vulnerability Management
Threat Management
Risk Management
Threats Attacks
Adversaries
Controls Safeguards
Age of “Protection” “Detection” “Response”
Attacks causing Irreversible harm
Cyber resilience
Unchecked gaps
New threats from/to AI systems
- CYBER503x�Cybersecurity Risk Management
- Basic Terminologies (1)
- Computer Security
- Information Security (InfoSec)
- What is Cybersecurity?
- Cyberspace
- Assets in Cyberspace
- Cybersecurity vs. InfoSec
- Cybersecurity vs. Computer Security
- IT Security
- IT Security vs. InfoSec
- Privacy concerns “Personal Information”
- Personal Information
- Basic Terminologies (2)
- The Illustration
- The Evolving Trends
- The Challenges Ahead:
- Top Cyber Threats in 2020s
- 2020s: Age of Resilience
- How are these “security” solutions?
- The Evolving Trends
DALLAS RESIDENCY POWERPOINT FILES/CYBER_503x_Unit_2.pdf
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management
Unit 2: Risk Management 1
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
The Origins of Risk Management
• The Shift in philosophy beyond “to buy insurance”: • The introduction of “Operations Research” and “Management
Science” • Emphasis on cost-benefit analysis, expected value, and a
scientific approach • to decision-making under uncertainty;
• A shift from descriptive to normative decision theory
• Risk management as a multi-disciplinary subject grew out of a merger of applications in the military and aerospace programs, financial theory, and insurance.
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
What is Risk?
• Risk is a threat that exploits some vulnerability that could cause harm to an asset.
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Risk • Business
disruption • Financial losses • Loss of privacy • Damage to
reputation • Loss of
confidence • Legal penalties • Impaired growth • Loss of life
Threat (actor, motivation, capability) • Angry
employees • Dishonest
employees • Criminals • Governments • Terrorists • The press • Competitors • Hackers • Nature
Vulnerability • Software bugs • Broken
processes • Ineffective
controls • Hardware flaws • Business
change • Legacy systems • Inadequate
BCP • Human errors
Asset • Server
machines • PC & laptops • Mobile devices • IT networks • Software &
apps • Data &
information • Connected
devices • Wearable
devices • Physical
infrastructure
Bald Tire Scenario
Asset: “Bald Tire” Threat: the earth and the gravity Vulnerability: frayed rope, cliff, sharp rocks Risk: a derived value and has a likelihood and a
magnitude component https://www.slideshare.net/pjbeyer/risk-explained-in-5-minutes-or-less
(1) (2) (3) (4)
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Risk Management Lifecycle
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
1. Risk Assessment • Identify Risk • Characterize Risk • Determine Risk
2. Risk Mitigation • Recommend control(s) • Cost-Benefit Analysis • Implementation Plan
3. Risk Evaluation • Continuous Monitoring • Effectiveness Analysis
Risk Management Approaches
• Reactive Approach: focus on respond • Incident response process
• Proactive Approach: focus on prevent and prepare • Quantitative risk assessment • Qualitative risk assessment
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Risk Characterization Methods
• Quantitative risk assessment • Leverage quantitative methodologies used by financial
institutions and insurance companies • Point risk estimate • Probability distributions
• Qualitative risk assessment • Calculate relative value based on subjective expert knowledge
• The conventional “Risk Matrix” approach
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
The Risk Matrix
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
How is Risk Managed?
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Mitigation
Acceptance
Avoid
Transfer
Likelihood
Im p
a c
t
Insignificant
Rare Almost certain
Catastrophic
Common Methodologies & Tools
• NIST RMF • OCTAVE • FRAP • COBRA • Risk Watch • FAIR
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
NIST Risk Management Framework
• Step 1: System Characterization • Step 2: Threat Identification • Step 3: Vulnerability Identification • Step 4: Control Analysis • Step 5: Likelihood Determination • Step 6: Impact Analysis • Step 7: Risk Determination • Step 8: Control Recommendations • Step 9: Results Documentation
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
OCTAVE by CMU/SEI
• Workshop-based not tool-based • Three Phases
1. Knowledge gather from senior managers on critical assets, threats and protection strategies
2. Knowledge gather from operational area managers 3. Knowledge gather from staff
• The outputs • Protection Strategy • Mitigation Plan • Action List
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
FRAP
• By Thomas Peltier, with a focus on cost-effective risk management techniques
• Formal qualitative risk analysis methodologies using • Vulnerability Analysis • Hazard Impact Analysis • Threat Analysis • Facilitator + small group of SME through discussions &
questionnaires
• Faster and Simpler - requires pre-screening systems • Integrates with BIA (Business Impact Analysis)
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
COBRA
• Consultative, Objective and Bi-functional Risk Analysis, created by C&A Systems Security in 1991
• Four primary knowledge bases: 1. IT Security (or default) 2. Operational Risk 3. ‘Quick Risk’ or ‘high level risk’ 4. e- Security
• Two main products 1. Risk Consultant 2. ISO Compliance
Risk Watch
• A Software Tool that uses an expert knowledge database • walk user through risk assessment • Generate reports
• It includes statistical analysis to support quantitative risk assessment, e.g. ROI
• Product Portfolio • SecureWatch • CyberWatch • ComplianceWatch (e.g. HIPPA, Banking, PCI, Nuclear
Cybersecurity compliances)
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
FAIR
• “Measuring and Managing Information Risk: A FAIR Approach” by Dr. Jack Freund and Jack Jones
• A quantitative risk analysis tool and methodology • Meaningful measurements for risk factors • Not about a checklist and formulas, but about critical thinking • Risk can be effectively measured to reduce the management
uncertainty about risk
• Shift from a compliance-based to a risk-based approach to InfoSec Risk and IT Risk
Other Related Frameworks & Standards
• COBIT by ISACA • RISK IT: includes all types of operational risk in IT, e.g. business
continuity
• ISO 27001 and 27002 • ISO 27005:2008
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
ISACA’s COBIT
• Control Objectives for Information and related Technology • COBIT supports IT governance by providing a framework to
ensure that • IT is aligned with the business • IT enables the business and maximizes benefits • IT resources are used responsibly • IT risks are managed appropriately
• Design to support • Executive and management boards • Business and IT management • Governance, assurance, control and security professionals
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Other Related Frameworks & Standards
• ISO 27001 and 27002 • ISO 27005:2008 – 27005 solely concentrates on security
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Risk Assessment
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Triggering Team Formation 1. Risk Assessment
• Identify Risk • Characterize Risk • Determine Risk
2. Risk Mitigation • Recommend control(s) • Cost-Benefit Analysis • Implementation Plan
3. Risk Evaluation • Continuous Monitoring • Effectiveness Analysis
Risk Assessment: Step 0: Scope, Asset & Team
• Begin with identifying the sponsor, to define what is to be accomplished.
• What questions to be answered? • Business operations or processes: e.g. eCommerce, supply chain
management • Business application: e.g. payroll processing, human resource
management • Information asset: e.g. customer data, credit card information • Physical asset: e.g. server, data center, sub-network, corporate
LAN • Data gathering approach
• Questionnaire or Data gathering template • Workshop and brainstorming
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Information Asset Classification
• Asset Classes • High business impact (HBI)
• Authentication credential, highly sensitive business materials, financial profiles, medical profiles, personally identifiable information, assets subjected to specific regulatory requirements
• Moderate business impact (MBI) • Internal business information (e.g. employee directory, network
infrastructure designs, information on internal Web sites) • Low business impact (LBI)
• Organization structure, public cryptographic keys, product brochures, white papers, obsolete business information, read access to publicly accessible web pages.
• Additional References for Information asset classification: • NIST Special Publication 800-60 workshops, “Mapping Types of
Information and Information Systems to Security Categories” • Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) publication 199,
“Security Categorization of Federal Information and Information Systems)”
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Deliverable for Step 0
• Reach agreement with owners on what the assessment is to
review and all relevant parameters • Assessment scope statement • Asset specifications and classifications • Team members with defined roles and responsibility
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Risk Management Program Team: Key Roles & Responsibilities
Role Responsibility
Senior Management • Incorporate results of the risk management program into the decision making process
• Resource allocation & capability development
Information Security Professional • Responsible for organization security program, including risk management
• Held liable if internal controls are not adequate • Determines the probability of impact on business assets
System & Information Owners • Determine the value of information asset • Ensure the proper controls are in place to address integrity,
confidentiality, and availability • Key role in “asset classification policy” • Has authority and responsibility for making cost-benefit decisions
Information Technology Engineering & Operations
• Design & implement technical solutions and estimate engineering costs
• Design & implement operational components of solution and estimate operating costs
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Example: eCommerce Operation Risk Assessment Scope and Asset
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Asset Classifications
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Assets Confidentiality Integrity Availability
User names LBI HBI HBI
Passwords HBI HBI HBI
Credit/Debit Card Info HBI HBI HBI
Address, phone, email LBI MBI LBI
Purchase transaction (in transit)
LBI HBI MBI
Risk Assessment: Step 1: Threat Identification
• Threat: The potential for a threat-source to exercise (accidentally trigger or intentionally exploit) a specific vulnerability.
• Threat Sources (or Actor) • Threat Occurrence Rates – L • Threat Impact:
ALE = V x L (V: value of an asset, ALE: Annual Loss Exposure) • Example: You have a $3 million data center located in a flood
area. A major flood that would destroy the data center occurs once every 100 years.
• Value = $3 million • Likelihood L = 0.01 • ALE = $3 million x 0.01 = $30,000
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Actor Motivation Threat
External hacker (Script-kiddies)
Curiosity Ego
System hacking Spoofing
Internal hacker Financial gain Disenchantment
Fraud Poor documentation
Cybercriminal Profit Ideology
DDoS, Phishing, Ransomware Credit card fraud, cyber stalking
Nation-State Hacker Power Revenge
Critical infrastructure attacks Multi-stage, multi-vector attacks
Poorly trained employee
Unintentional errors Corruption of data Malicious code introduced
Cracker Monetary gain Unauthorized data alteration
Social engineering System intrusion Impersonation
Actors, Motivators, and Threats
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
New Threat Landscape
• Nature of threats changing • Today’s attacks sophisticated and successful • Network perimeter dissolving • Existing detection techniques failing:
• Coordinated Persistent Threat Actors • Dynamic, polymorphic malware • Multi-vector attacks • Multi-stage attacks
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Threat Intelligence
• What is it? • Threat Intelligence is the knowledge extracted from relevant data
and information that helps you identify threats and make informed decisions.
• Intelligence Typologies • Operational Intelligence: produced entirely by computers,
e.g. automatic detection of DDoS • Strategic Intelligence: produced by human analysts
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Risk Assessment: Step 3: Vulnerability Identification
• The use of vulnerability sources (e.g. previous risk assessment documents, audit reports, system test and evaluation reports)
• NIST I-CAT vulnerability database (http://icat.nist.gov) • National Vulnerability Database (NVD – http://nvd.nist.gov) • Common Vulnerability and Exposures (CVE – http://cve.mitre.org ) • Commercial computer incident/emergency response teams and post lists (e.g.
SecurityFocus.com forum mailings) • System security testing (proactive methods)
• Automated vulnerability scanning tools • Security test and evaluation • Penetration testing
• Development of security requirements checklist • Management (e.g. Continuity of support, incident response capability,
assignment of responsibilities, risk assessment, etc.) • Operational (e.g. facility protection, workstation, laptops, external data
distribution and labeling) • Technical (e.g. cryptography, discretionary access control, identification and
authentication, intrusion detection, system audit, etc.)
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Risk Assessment: Step 3: Vulnerability Identification
CYBER 503x Cybersecurity Risk Management | Tong Sun
Vulnerability Threat-Source Threat Action
Terminated employees’ system ID are not removed from the system
Terminated employees Dialing into the company’s network and accessing company proprietary data.
Company firewall allows inbound telnet, and guest ID is enabled on XYZ server.
Unauthorized users (e.g. hackers, computer criminals, terrorists)
Using telnet to XYZ server ad browsing system files with the guest ID
The vendor has identified flaws in the security design of the system; however, new patches have not been applied.
Unauthorized users Obtaining unauthorized access to sensitive system files based on known system vulnerability.
- CYBER 503x�Cybersecurity Risk Management
- The Origins of Risk Management
- What is Risk?
- Bald Tire Scenario
- Risk Management Lifecycle
- Risk Management Approaches
- Risk Characterization Methods
- The Risk Matrix
- How is Risk Managed?
- Common Methodologies & Tools
- NIST Risk Management Framework
- OCTAVE by CMU/SEI
- FRAP
- COBRA
- Risk Watch
- FAIR
- Other Related Frameworks & Standards
- ISACA’s COBIT
- Other Related Frameworks & Standards
- Risk Assessment
- Risk Assessment: �Step 0: Scope, Asset & Team
- Information Asset Classification
- �Deliverable for Step 0
- Risk Management Program Team:�Key Roles & Responsibilities
- Example: eCommerce Operation Risk Assessment Scope and Asset
- Asset Classifications
- Risk Assessment: �Step 1: Threat Identification
- Actors, Motivators, and Threats
- New Threat Landscape
- Threat Intelligence
- Risk Assessment: �Step 3: Vulnerability Identification
- Risk Assessment: �Step 3: Vulnerability Identification