Malware & Threats

Matching Protection Criteria to the Next Wave of Threats

It seems that nearly every five years we’re faced with a new cycle of threats – from viruses to worms to spyware and rootkits. Today we find ourselves combatting the latest wave – advanced malware, targeted attacks and advanced persistent threats (APTs). While these threats have demonstrated themselves to be more damaging than any in their wake, technologies are available to deal with them. We just need to select the right ones and apply them correctly.

<p><span><span>It seems that nearly every five years we’re faced with a new cycle of threats – from viruses to worms to spyware and rootkits. Today we find ourselves combatting the latest wave – advanced malware, targeted attacks and advanced persistent threats (APTs). While these threats have demonstrated themselves to be more damaging than any in their wake, technologies are available to deal with them. We just need to select the right ones and apply them correctly. </span></span></p>

It seems that nearly every five years we’re faced with a new cycle of threats – from viruses to worms to spyware and rootkits. Today we find ourselves combatting the latest wave – advanced malware, targeted attacks and advanced persistent threats (APTs). While these threats have demonstrated themselves to be more damaging than any in their wake, technologies are available to deal with them. We just need to select the right ones and apply them correctly.

In this continuously evolving threat landscape you need to ask yourself: Am I using the right criteria to determine how to better protect my organization from advanced attacks?

The Verizon 2013 Data Breach Investigations Report offers several recommendations for how to more effectively deal with breaches. Below are a few of those recommendations with technologies and techniques to consider and specific questions to ask vendors to help you make more informed decisions to defend against advanced malware and targeted attacks.

1. Collect, analyze and share incident data to create a rich data source that can drive security program effectiveness.

Modern networks include not only traditional networks, but also endpoints, virtual systems and mobile devices. These extended networks constantly evolve and spawn new attack vectors – for example web-enabled and mobile applications, hypervisors, social media, web browsers and devices that roam outside of the corporate network. Consider security approaches that use a telemetry model to gather data across these extended networks and leverage big data analytics and the power of the cloud to continuously store and analyze data from these networks and their components.

Key questions to ask your vendor include:

• How do you gather intelligence across all components of today’s extended networks?

• How are you leveraging big data for persistent threat determination?

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• How is malware analyzed to determine exactly what it does?

2. Collect, analyze and share tactical threat intelligence, especially indicators of Compromise (IOCs) that can greatly aid defense and detection.

Threats can pass through defenses today and become maliciously repurposed tomorrow. Point-in-time detection and blocking is no longer enough. Technologies need to address the full attack continuum – before, during and after an attack, using a continuous capability. Identify security approaches that use cloud analytics to evaluate suspicious or unknown files against the latest threat intelligence for an extended period of time and share that intelligence across the community of users for ‘collective immunity.’ The capability to perform deeper analytics to correlate events, find systems that demonstrate symptoms of active compromise and then automate analysis and risk prioritization can mitigate damage and speed remediation. Key questions to ask your vendor include:

• How does your malware analysis automatically update detection capabilities across control points and across all customers?

• How do you gather intelligence on emerging threats?

• How are you able to confirm if a device or system is actively compromised?

3. Without deemphasizing prevention, focus on better and faster detection through a blend of people, processes and technology.

When an incident happens, can you respond quickly and effectively? You need technologies that continuously monitoring files originally deemed safe or unknown and enable you to apply retrospective security – the ability to quickly identify, scope, track, investigate and remediate if these files are later determined to be malicious. However, thwarting attacks can’t just be about products, but also process and personnel. In the event of an attack you need documented Incident Response processes and policies and a designated team that can leverage the data from your security tools to make educated decisions and take quick action. Key questions to ask your vendor include:

• How do you deal with a threat if detection happens hours or days later?

• What forms of controls do you have to stop an outbreak and identify root causes?

• How is incident response supported with data that can be used to evaluate an event and develop and deploy countermeasures?

The Verizon report states: “2012. Perhaps more so than any other year, the large scale and diverse nature of data breaches and other network attacks took center stage.” But as attackers have continued to innovate, so too have defenders. The technology and processes are here for more effective protection of increasingly complex IT environments against sophisticated attacks. By asking the right questions you can have confidence that you’re making the best decisions to protect your organization.

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