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Monday, November 16, 2009

Extending Security Event Correlation

Posted on 4:31 AM by Unknown
Last year at this time I wrote a series of posts on security event correlation. I offered the following definition in the final post:

Security event correlation is the process of applying criteria to data inputs, generally of a conditional ("if-then") nature, in order to generate actionable data outputs.

Since then what I have found is that products and people still claim this as a goal, but for the most part achieving it remains elusive.

Please also see that last post for what SEC is not, i.e., SEC is not simply collection (of data sources), normalization (of data sources), prioritization (of events), suppression (via thresholding), accumulation (via simple incrementing counters), centralization (of policies), summarization (via reports), administration (of software), or delegation (of tasks).

So is SEC anything else? Based on some operational uses I have seen, I think I can safely introduce an extension to "true" SEC: applying information from one or more data sources to develop context for another data source. What does that mean?

One example I saw recently (and this is not particularly new, but it's definitely useful), involves NetWitness 9.0. Their new NetWitness Identity function adds user names collected from Active Directory to the meta data available while investigating network traffic. Analysts can choose to review sessions based on user names rather than just using source IP addresses.

This is certainly not an "if-then" proposition, as sold by SIM vendors, but the value of this approach is clear. I hope my use of the word "context" doesn't apply to much historical security baggage to this conversation. I'm not talking about making IDS alerts more useful by knowing the qualities of a target of server-side attack, for example. Rather, to take the case of a server side attack scenario, imagine replacing the source IP with the country "Bulgaria" and the target IP with "Web server hosting Application X" or similar. It's a different way for an analyst to think about an investigation.
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