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Incident Response for Windows

Incident Response for Windows

By : Tykushin, Ostrovskaya
4.8 (9)
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Incident Response for Windows

Incident Response for Windows

4.8 (9)
By: Tykushin, Ostrovskaya

Overview of this book

Cybersecurity incidents are becoming increasingly common and costly, making incident response a critical domain for organizations to understand and implement. This book enables you to effectively detect, respond to, and prevent cyberattacks on Windows-based systems by equipping you with the knowledge and tools needed to safeguard your organization's critical assets, in line with the current threat landscape. The book begins by introducing you to modern sophisticated cyberattacks, including threat actors, methods, and motivations. Then, the phases of efficient incident response are linked to the attack's life cycle using a unified cyber kill chain. As you advance, you'll explore various types of Windows-based platform endpoint forensic evidence and the arsenal necessary to gain full visibility of the Windows infrastructure. The concluding chapters discuss the best practices in the threat hunting process, along with proactive approaches that you can take to discover cybersecurity incidents before they reach their final stage. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained the skills necessary to run intelligence-driven incident response in a Windows environment, establishing a full-fledged incident response and management process, as well as proactive methodologies to enhance the cybersecurity posture of an enterprise environment.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Understanding the Threat Landscape and Attack Life Cycle
4
Part 2: Incident Response Procedures and Endpoint Forensic Evidence Collection
7
Part 3: Incident Analysis and Threat Hunting on Windows Systems
15
Part 4: Incident Investigation Management and Reporting

Understanding C2 communication channels

After the initial compromise, threat actors need to communicate in some way with the victim host to be able to collect the necessary data, conduct reconnaissance within the network, and be able to spread to other hosts to achieve their main goal. Threat actors can use a variety of techniques for this communication, but their primary objective is stealth, as if they are easily detected in the initial stages of an attack, it could compromise their ability to further develop the attack. This is why most advanced threat actors seek to conceal communication with the control server by trying to disguise it as a legitimate activity, normal to the victim’s infrastructure. To do so, they may use, for example, the Application Layer Protocol (T1071) technique, using HTTP, HTTPS, DNS, or protocols from other layers of the OSI model, such as the network, transport, or session layers. In its report (https://www.group-ib.com/resources/research-hub/red...

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