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Practical Threat Intelligence and Data-Driven Threat Hunting

You're reading from   Practical Threat Intelligence and Data-Driven Threat Hunting A hands-on guide to threat hunting with the ATT&CKâ„¢ Framework and open source tools

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838556372
Length 398 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Valentina Costa-Gazcón Valentina Costa-Gazcón
Author Profile Icon Valentina Costa-Gazcón
Valentina Costa-Gazcón
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Cyber Threat Intelligence
2. Chapter 1: What Is Cyber Threat Intelligence? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: What Is Threat Hunting? 4. Chapter 3: Where Does the Data Come From? 5. Section 2: Understanding the Adversary
6. Chapter 4: Mapping the Adversary 7. Chapter 5: Working with Data 8. Chapter 6: Emulating the Adversary 9. Section 3: Working with a Research Environment
10. Chapter 7: Creating a Research Environment 11. Chapter 8: How to Query the Data 12. Chapter 9: Hunting for the Adversary 13. Chapter 10: Importance of Documenting and Automating the Process 14. Section 4: Communicating to Succeed
15. Chapter 11: Assessing Data Quality 16. Chapter 12: Understanding the Output 17. Chapter 13: Defining Good Metrics to Track Success 18. Chapter 14: Engaging the Response Team and Communicating the Result to Executives 19. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix – The State of the Hunt

Understanding the hunt results

All the exercises done so far have had an inherent unfairness to their nature: they were all made in a lab environment. The differences between hunting in a lab environment versus hunting in production are notable. Probably, the number of devices in our lab is going to be much smaller than the number of devices available in production. The same will happen with the number of users and the "noise" they generate by user interaction with the system.

This means that when testing our detections over production, we will most likely have to refine our detection queries to reduce the number of hits we get as a result. Threat hunting is not about verifying false positive results (although you will encounter those too), but about finding the false negatives. In other words, we are not trying to verify that the detected events are not malicious but rather to build detections for malicious behaviors that have surpassed our organization's detection...

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