Summary
Throughout this chapter, we began by discussing the need and benefit of guidelines, procedures, standards, and policies. We spent some time providing guidance around building out a GIR and providing judgment criteria to determine whether the one you are defining is well-crafted and how to evaluate it. Then, we talked about how to prioritize the GIR and make it organization-centric.
After that general introduction, we introduced you to FCRs, IERs, DIRs, PIRs, and SIRs, which gave you the opportunity to decide how granular your collection management could be. One suggestion could be to move all the requirements into a relational database for ease of tracking the interconnectivity between all the requirements.
In the next chapter, we will begin by introducing you to the threat intelligence frameworks, standards, and platforms that can be used to collect, store, and distribute threat intelligence collection. Understanding the available frameworks, the standards around storage...