Incident Response: Practice Makes Perfect

 

Is it possible to keep information secure? Read on to find out.

IF there is only one person that knows the information, IF that person never writes that information down or records it electronically, and IF that person is lucky enough not to blurt out the information while they are sleeping, drugged or injured, then the answer is yes…probably. Under any other conditions, then the answer is an emphatic NO! It is an unfortunate truth that no system ever developed to protect the security of information is perfect; they all can be breached one way or another. That is why it is so important to have a good incident response program in place at your organization.

And most of you out there, I’m sure, have an incident response plan in place. All information security standards organizations such as ISO and NIST include incident response in their guidance, and many of you are required to have incident response programs in place in order to comply with regulation. But how many of you practice responding to incidents to make sure your planning actually works? At MicroSolved, we’ve been involved in reviewing, developing and testing information security incident response programs for many years. And we have found that no matter how good response plans looks on paper, they’re just not effective if you don’t practice them. Practicing doesn’t have to be a big chore, either. We’ve helped many organizations conduct table top incident response exercises and they usually only last a few hours. They’ve never failed to produce valuable returns.

Unfortunately, there are no good incident response exercise frameworks available out there – we’ve looked. But it is not hard to create your own. Simply pick a type of incident you want to practice – a malware attack for example. You imagine what such an attack would look like to your help desk personnel, system administrators, security personnel, etc. and construct a scenario from that. You just need a basic outline since the details of the response will construct themselves as you proceed with the exercise.

What we have found from conducting and observing these exercises is that problems with the written plan are always exposed. Sure, maybe the plan says that this group of people should be contacted, but is there a procedure for ensuring that list is always kept current in place? Have you made pre-arrangements with a forensic specialist in case you need one? Are the help desk personnel and desk top administrators trained in how to recognize the signs of an attack in process? These are the types of issues performing simple table top incident response exercises will reveal.

Perhaps you will be lucky and never experience a bad information security incident. But if you do, you will be very glad indeed if you have a well practiced information security incident response program in place!

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