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Incident Response in the Age of Cloud

Incident Response in the Age of Cloud

By : Dr. Erdal Ozkaya
4.6 (16)
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Incident Response in the Age of Cloud

Incident Response in the Age of Cloud

4.6 (16)
By: Dr. Erdal Ozkaya

Overview of this book

Cybercriminals are always in search of new methods to infiltrate systems. Quickly responding to an incident will help organizations minimize losses, decrease vulnerabilities, and rebuild services and processes. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, with most organizations gravitating towards remote working and cloud computing, this book uses frameworks such as MITRE ATT&CK® and the SANS IR model to assess security risks. The book begins by introducing you to the cybersecurity landscape and explaining why IR matters. You will understand the evolution of IR, current challenges, key metrics, and the composition of an IR team, along with an array of methods and tools used in an effective IR process. You will then learn how to apply these strategies, with discussions on incident alerting, handling, investigation, recovery, and reporting. Further, you will cover governing IR on multiple platforms and sharing cyber threat intelligence and the procedures involved in IR in the cloud. Finally, the book concludes with an “Ask the Experts” chapter wherein industry experts have provided their perspective on diverse topics in the IR sphere. By the end of this book, you should become proficient at building and applying IR strategies pre-emptively and confidently.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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16
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17
Index

Reporting to a SOC team and third-party services using IOC feeds

Some of the significant objectives of a SOC team are to monitor enterprise systems, secure systems against data breaches, and proactively identify and mitigate security risks. Monitoring their environment for malicious activities requires them to know what attackers are doing and how to find suspicious activity within their infrastructure.

Therefore, third-party services like Indicator of Compromise (IOC) feeds are important sources for SOC team members to get data intelligence because, when cyber criminals attack an organization, they usually leave traces like IP addresses, host and domain names, email addresses, filenames, file hashes, and so on.

Organizations using a variety of cybersecurity solutions are generally integrated with one or more IOC feeds to create a cyber intelligence data pool to prevent future attacks. With this information acquired from IOC feeds, an SOC member can conduct an in-depth investigation...

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