right boom Piergiorgio Venuti

How to manage the “right boom” after a security incident with Log Management, IT monitoring and SOCaaS services

Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

The “right boom” refers to the frenetic situation that occurs in the immediate aftermath of a major cybersecurity incident such as a data breach or ransomware attack. When a business suffers a breach, it’s critical to act quickly to contain the damage, restore systems, assist affected customers, and initiate a forensic investigation. This intense phase of activity is known as the “right boom”.

Effectively managing the right boom after an accident is critical but extremely challenging. IT and security teams must work closely together to gather evidence, reconstruct events, and bring systems back online quickly and securely. That’s why services like Log Management, IT monitoring and Security Operations Center as a Service (SOCaaS) are indispensable.

What is Log Management

Log Management consists of the centralized collection, analysis and archiving of logs generated by hardware, software, applications and other IT components. Logs contain valuable information about user activities and system operations. A log management solution collects this scattered data and aggregates it to provide a unified view of what is happening across your IT infrastructure.

During the right boom, immediate access to detailed logs on all compromised systems is invaluable for reconstructing attack history and identifying the input vector used by attackers.

The importance of ICT monitoring

Monitoring your IT infrastructure is critical for quickly identifying and resolving issues that could cause costly downtime. An ICT monitoring solution collects key metrics such as CPU and memory usage, available storage space, and the availability of servers, applications, and services.

During the right boom, real-time monitoring of all systems is essential to verify stability and performance while trying to restore operations. Monitoring dashboards provide visibility into the health of your systems, allowing you to quickly identify any problems or abnormal behavior.

Security Operations Center as a Service

A Security Operations Center (SOC) is a center dedicated to monitoring, analyzing and responding to security events 24/7. A SOC brings together tools such as SIEMs, intrusion detection systems, and endpoint monitoring and response technologies.

A SOC’s staff includes experienced security analysts who can effectively coordinate the response to a large-scale incident. During the right boom, a SOCaaS partner is indispensable:

  • Gli analisti del SOC possono condurre l’indagine forense e identificare l’origine e la causa dell’attacco.
  • The SOC provides expert recommendations on how to contain the breach and recover systems safely.
  • The SOC continuously monitors IT environments during the right boom to identify suspicious activity.

Esternalizzando al SOCaaS si ottiene supporto immediato da professionisti esperti durante la fase critica del right boom.

The advantages of having all the data available to reconstruct an accident

To fully investigate the cause of an attack and prevent future similar incidents, you need comprehensive, centralized data on all activities prior to and during the breach.

Having access to detailed logs from multiple sources provides an accurate history of how the attack unfolded, empowering your response team. The consolidated data also helps identify precursor signals that may have been missed.

Finally, secure log retention helps demonstrate compliance with regulations like GDPR and provides digital evidence that can support lawsuits against attackers.

Conclusion

To effectively manage the right boom after a major security incident, companies need comprehensive Log Management, IT Monitoring and SOCaaS solutions. These services provide visibility, investigative data, specialized expertise, and 24/7 monitoring during hectic post-incident response and recovery activities. Investing in these critical capabilities allows you to minimize the impact of breaches and resume operations as quickly as possible.

Useful links:

Share


RSS

More Articles…

Categories …

Tags

RSS darkreading

RSS Full Disclosure

  • Microsoft PlayReady - complete client identity compromise May 9, 2024
    Posted by Security Explorations on May 09Hello All, We have come up with two attack scenarios that make it possible to extract private ECC keys used by a PlayReady client (Windows SW DRM scenario) for the communication with a license server and identity purposes. More specifically, we successfully demonstrated the extraction of the following keys: […]
  • secuvera-SA-2024-02: Multiple Persistent Cross-Site Scritping (XSS) flaws in Drupal-Wiki May 6, 2024
    Posted by Simon Bieber via Fulldisclosure on May 06secuvera-SA-2024-02: Multiple Persistent Cross-Site Scritping (XSS) flaws in Drupal-Wiki Affected Products Drupal Wiki 8.31 Drupal Wiki 8.30 (older releases have not been tested) References https://www.secuvera.de/advisories/secuvera-SA-2024-02.txt (used for updates) CVE-2024-34481 CWE-79: Improper Neutralization of Input During Web Page Generation ('Cross-site Scripting') CVSS-B: 6.4 (...
  • OXAS-ADV-2024-0002: OX App Suite Security Advisory May 6, 2024
    Posted by Martin Heiland via Fulldisclosure on May 06Dear subscribers, We're sharing our latest advisory with you and like to thank everyone who contributed in finding and solving those vulnerabilities. Feel free to join our bug bounty programs for OX App Suite, Dovecot and PowerDNS at YesWeHack. This advisory has also been published at https://documentation.open-xchange.com/appsuite/security/advisories/html/2024/oxas-adv-2024-0002.html. […]
  • Microsoft PlayReady toolkit - codes release May 6, 2024
    Posted by Security Explorations on May 06Hello All, We released codes for "Microsoft PlayReady toolkit", a tool that has been developed as part of our research from 2022: https://security-explorations.com/microsoft-playready.html#details The toolkit illustrates the following: - fake client device identity generation, - acquisition of license and content keys for encrypted content, - downloading and decryption of […]
  • Live2D Cubism refusing to fix validation issue leading to heap corruption. May 3, 2024
    Posted by PT via Fulldisclosure on May 03Live2D Cubism is the dominant "vtuber" software suite for 2D avatars for use in livestreaming and integrating them in other software. They publish various SDKs and a frameworks for integrating their libraries with your own program. You're supposed to use those to deserialize and render/animate the models created […]
  • Microsoft PlayReady white-box cryptography weakness May 1, 2024
    Posted by Security Explorations on May 01Hello All, There is yet another attack possible against Protected Media Path process beyond the one involving two global XOR keys [1]. The new attack may also result in the extraction of a plaintext content key value. The attack has its origin in a white-box crypto [2] implementation. More […]
  • Defense in depth -- the Microsoft way (part 87): shipping more rotten software to billions of unsuspecting customers April 24, 2024
    Posted by Stefan Kanthak on Apr 24Hi @ll, this post is a continuation of and With the release of .NET Framework 4.8 in April 2019, Microsoft updated the following paragraph of the MSDN article "What's new in .NET Framework" | Starting with .NET Framework 4.5, the clrcompression.dll assembly...
  • Response to CVE-2023-26756 - Revive Adserver April 24, 2024
    Posted by Matteo Beccati on Apr 24CVE-2023-26756 has been recently filed against the Revive Adserver project. The action was taken without first contacting us, and it did not follow the security process that is thoroughly documented on our website. The project team has been given no notice before or after the disclosure. Our team has […]
  • BACKDOOR.WIN32.DUMADOR.C / Remote Stack Buffer Overflow (SEH) April 19, 2024
    Posted by malvuln on Apr 19Discovery / credits: Malvuln (John Page aka hyp3rlinx) (c) 2024 Original source: https://malvuln.com/advisory/6cc630843cabf23621375830df474bc5.txt Contact: malvuln13 () gmail com Media: twitter.com/malvuln Threat: Backdoor.Win32.Dumador.c Vulnerability: Remote Stack Buffer Overflow (SEH) Description: The malware runs an FTP server on TCP port 10000. Third-party adversaries who can reach the server can send a specially […]
  • SEC Consult SA-20240418-0 :: Broken authorization in Dreamehome app April 19, 2024
    Posted by SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab via Fulldisclosure on Apr 19SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory < 20240418-0 > ======================================================================= title: Broken authorization product: Dreamehome app vulnerable version:

Customers

Newsletter

{subscription_form_1}