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Purple Team Strategies

You're reading from   Purple Team Strategies Enhancing global security posture through uniting red and blue teams with adversary emulation

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801074292
Length 450 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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David Routin David Routin
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David Routin
Samuel Rossier Samuel Rossier
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Samuel Rossier
Simon Thoores Simon Thoores
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Simon Thoores
Michael Molho Michael Molho
Author Profile Icon Michael Molho
Michael Molho
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Concept, Model, and Methodology
2. Chapter 1: Contextualizing Threats and Today's Challenges FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Purple Teaming – a Generic Approach and a New Model 4. Chapter 3: Carrying out Adversary Emulation with CTI 5. Chapter 4: Threat Management – Detecting, Hunting, and Preventing 6. Part 2: Building a Purple Infrastructure
7. Chapter 5: Red Team Infrastructure 8. Chapter 6: Blue Team – Collect 9. Chapter 7: Blue Team – Detect 10. Chapter 8: Blue Team – Correlate 11. Chapter 9: Purple Team Infrastructure 12. Part 3: The Most Common Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures (TTPs) and Defenses
13. Chapter 10: Purple Teaming the ATT&CK Tactics 14. Part 4: Assessing and Improving
15. Chapter 11: Purple Teaming with BAS and Adversary Emulation 16. Chapter 12: PTX – Purple Teaming eXtended 17. Chapter 13: PTX – Automation and DevOps Approach 18. Chapter 14: Exercise Wrap-Up and KPIs 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Data sources of interest

There are obviously many different data sources that could be interesting to integrate, and they depend on each organization's activity, specific use cases, and risk appetite. A key point to mention is that throughout our experience, we have often seen that companies spent months (even years) adding each and every data source within their SIEM. To caricature the approach, let's collect everything and we'll see what we do with the data later. More specifically, companies usually tend to focus on bias risk analysis, which identifies the most critical assets, that is to say, the crown jewels, in order to create detection rules. It often ends up with complex integration and low-value detection use cases. Of course, it might work with the necessary resources (staff, budget, and time) but might still not focus on what real threats would be doing. Indeed, risk assessment very often doesn't leverage cyber threat intelligence (CTI) inputs as it should...

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