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The Foundations of Threat Hunting

You're reading from   The Foundations of Threat Hunting Organize and design effective cyber threat hunts to meet business needs

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803242996
Length 246 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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William Copeland William Copeland
Author Profile Icon William Copeland
William Copeland
Chad Maurice Chad Maurice
Author Profile Icon Chad Maurice
Chad Maurice
Jeremiah Ginn Jeremiah Ginn
Author Profile Icon Jeremiah Ginn
Jeremiah Ginn
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Preparation – Why and How to Start the Hunting Process
2. Chapter 1: An Introduction to Threat Hunting FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Requirements and Motivations 4. Chapter 3: Team Construct 5. Chapter 4: Communication Breakdown 6. Chapter 5: Methodologies 7. Chapter 6: Threat Intelligence 8. Chapter 7: Planning 9. Part 2: Execution – Conducting a Hunt
10. Chapter 8: Defending the Defenders 11. Chapter 9: Hardware and Toolsets 12. Chapter 10: Data Analysis 13. Chapter 11: Documentation 14. Part 3: Recovery – Post-Hunt Activity
15. Chapter 12: Deliverables 16. Chapter 13: Post-Hunt Activity and Maturing a Team 17. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix

Direct analysis versus secondary correlation

When a team analyzes data, there are two methods for the data to be analyzed and compared with other events. These two methods are direct analysis and secondary correlation:

  • Direct analysis means going directly to the target source for information. If a system is believed to be running a malicious process, an analyst remoting into the system and viewing the running processes would be direct analysis.
  • Secondary correlation means going back one step and inferring the state of a target without interacting directly with the target source. An analyst observing network traffic leaving a system and going to a known malicious command and control site would allow them to infer that the malicious code was being executed on the system.

Direct analysis will typically be observable by an adversary if they are looking for it. An analyst remoting into a system and running commands or even looking at the normal system-generated logs are...

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