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Operationalizing Threat Intelligence

You're reading from   Operationalizing Threat Intelligence A guide to developing and operationalizing cyber threat intelligence programs

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801814683
Length 460 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Joseph Opacki Joseph Opacki
Author Profile Icon Joseph Opacki
Joseph Opacki
Kyle Wilhoit Kyle Wilhoit
Author Profile Icon Kyle Wilhoit
Kyle Wilhoit
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: What Is Threat Intelligence?
2. Chapter 1: Why You Need a Threat Intelligence Program FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Threat Actors, Campaigns, and Tooling 4. Chapter 3: Guidelines and Policies 5. Chapter 4: Threat Intelligence Frameworks, Standards, Models, and Platforms 6. Section 2: How to Collect Threat Intelligence
7. Chapter 5: Operational Security (OPSEC) 8. Chapter 6: Technical Threat Intelligence – Collection 9. Chapter 7: Technical Threat Analysis – Enrichment 10. Chapter 8: Technical Threat Analysis – Threat Hunting and Pivoting 11. Chapter 9: Technical Threat Analysis – Similarity Analysis 12. Section 3: What to Do with Threat Intelligence
13. Chapter 10: Preparation and Dissemination 14. Chapter 11: Fusion into Other Enterprise Operations 15. Chapter 12: Overview of Datasets and Their Practical Application 16. Chapter 13: Conclusion 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

The motivation for hunting and pivoting

Before we dive into the motivation to perform threat hunting and pivoting, we first must examine what those terms mean. As mentioned earlier, threat hunting is a term that is often misunderstood, misrepresented, and misused. In simple terms, threat hunting is looking for threat activity in a network, on a host or server, or in logs, telemetry data, and antifactory datasets. Hunting often starts on the foundation of a goal or hypothesis, which helps dictate a specific first entry point into a hunt. Examined more closely, however, threat hunting often has varied motivations and layers depending on the organizational function and requirements.

Threat hunting is often performed on logs and datasets, with logs sometimes being examined by threat hunting teams typically attached to security operations center (SOC) functions, as an example. It can also be done by employees of organizations wishing to look through organizational telemetry data to...

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