Tag: Incident response

Protect Yourself from Cyber-breaches: Digital Forensics and Incident Response | Blog

According to the Identity Theft Resource Center, a staggering 1,200+ breaches were reported in 2018. A breach can wreak havoc on a business, including – but not limited to – loss of revenue and reputational harm. And poor incident response can compound that damage, as demonstrated by breaches at Deloitte, Equifax, Uber, and Yahoo.

Some enterprises are recognizing the importance of being prepared and able to respond to attacks: 22 percent of respondents to a 2018 Everest Group survey rated “reduction in time/effort to detect, respond, and recover from breaches” as their top strategic priority in next 12-24 months.

But given the dangers, 100 percent of enterprises need to think through and create an effective risk mitigation strategy. This is where Digital Forensics and Incident Response (DFIR) can be essential. Combining incident response with deep forensic analysis to collect and examine digital evidence on electronic devices, an effective DFIR strategy can help mitigate business risks in the early stages of an attack.

Twin Forces Driving DFIR adoption

Starting on the DFIR journey: an enterprise perspective

The first step in the journey is establishing forensic analysis and incident response teams responsible for reporting, incident handling, and monitoring when a breach is detected.

The incident response team should have specific training in areas such as file systems and operating system design, and have knowledge of possible network and host attack vectors.

After a breach is detected, the forensic analysts must work closely with the incident response team to address several issues, such as isolating affected systems and making containment decisions, based on existing device, access, and data security policies. Enterprises must also update their policies regularly to stay ahead of attackers.

Putting DFIR into action

An effective incident response plan should include the following components:

Enterprise action items following breach detection

A guided approach to creating a DFIR strategy

Enterprises without a cyber-attack incident response plan leave themselves open to potentially insurmountable losses. Despite the danger, they often face significant challenges in creating a plan. These challenges include:

  • Limited budget for plan development and forensic analysis
  • Lack of built-in approval systems to kick off incident response
  • Lack of support for cyber insurance policies
  • Lack of adequate skill sets to perform forensic analysis.

Our guided approach to developing a DFIR strategy can help enterprises evaluate and onboard digital forensics as part of their overall cybersecurity strategy.

DFIR strategy for enterprises

Specialist DFIR offerings can help

As many enterprises aren’t equipped to improve their security posture and reduce incident response times on their own, specialist DFIR vendors – such as CrowdStrike, Cylance, and Mandiant – can assist with suites of holistic offerings. In contrast with managed security services (MSS) players, specialist DFIR vendors lead with localization as their core value proposition. Their product-centric service offerings, localization, and a guided approach help enterprises build resilient business are valuable resources for enterprises.

In fact, DFIR capabilities are becoming a deal clincher/breaker in large security transformation deals between enterprises and MSS providers. Enterprises need to carefully analyze the value proposition of their current/potential MSS partners serving as their DFIR vendor. The following checklist can help enterprises determine if their MSS providers can provide DFIR services.

Enterprises MSS Partner checklist for DFIR capabilities

Approaching DFIR in the digital world

Today’s business environment has dramatically changed the way enterprises need to address DFIR. Adoption of digital technologies such as cloud, IoT, mobility, software defined everything (SDX), etc., has made traditional forensics techniques obsolete. And issues such as evidence acquisition, validation, and cataloging are just the tip of the iceberg.

The following new approach can help enterprises effectively protect themselves against cyber attacks in the digital world.

The new approach to DFIR

Given what’s at stake, enterprises must understand that remaining in the dark about potential breaches can prove significantly more devastating than the time and resources required to build or onboard competent digital forensics capabilities. DFIR can be a challenge, but it’s worth it.

Please reach out to us at [email protected] and [email protected] if you are interested in exploring DFIR in further detail.

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