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Threat Hunting with Elastic Stack

You're reading from   Threat Hunting with Elastic Stack Solve complex security challenges with integrated prevention, detection, and response

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801073783
Length 392 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Andrew Pease Andrew Pease
Author Profile Icon Andrew Pease
Andrew Pease
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Introduction to Threat Hunting, Analytical Models, and Hunting Methodologies
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Cyber Threat Intelligence, Analytical Models, and Frameworks FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Hunting Concepts, Methodologies, and Techniques 4. Section 2: Leveraging the Elastic Stack for Collection and Analysis
5. Chapter 3: Introduction to the Elastic Stack 6. Chapter 4: Building Your Hunting Lab – Part 1 7. Chapter 5: Building Your Hunting Lab – Part 2 8. Chapter 6: Data Collection with Beats and Elastic Agent 9. Chapter 7: Using Kibana to Explore and Visualize Data 10. Chapter 8: The Elastic Security App 11. Section 3: Operationalizing Threat Hunting
12. Chapter 9: Using Kibana to Pivot Through Data to Find Adversaries 13. Chapter 10: Leveraging Hunting to Inform Operations 14. Chapter 11: Enriching Data to Make Intelligence 15. Chapter 12: Sharing Information and Analysis 16. Assessments 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using observations to perform targeted hunts

As we explored in the previous section, using an Elastic Agent to detect and track malware samples is a great way to collect observations and security events that are happening on a system. However, what happens when we want to search through historic data to identify any previously infected systems? We can use the information we've collected to identify previously undetected infections.

There are several reasons as to why a system might have been infected without detection. It could be as simple as the system not having an Elastic Agent on it, the malware sample could be using bleeding-edge capabilities to evade detection at the time of infection, or it could also be that an alert just wasn't responded to.

Now that we've identified some malware samples on the victim machine, let's discuss the process to use that metadata to identify additional infections.

Pivoting to find more infections

Now that we've...

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