Introduction to IOA concepts

This section details the concepts that administrators must know to understand the processes involved in the detection of IOAs and in the execution of remedial actions (automatic and manual).

Event

An action executed by a process on a user computer and monitored by Advanced EDR. Events are sent to the Cytomic cloud in real time as part of the telemetry. Automatic analysis advanced technologies, analysts, and threat hunters analyze them in their context to determine whether they could be part of the CKC of a cyberattack.

Indicator

A sequence of unusual actions found in the events generated on a customer computer and which could be part of an early-stage cyberattack.

Indicator of attack (IOA)

An indicator that is highly likely to be a cyberattack. These are generally attacks in early stages or in exploit phase. These attacks do not normally use malware, as adversaries usually use the operating system’s own tools to execute the attack and thereby hide the traces of their activity. We recommend that you contain or remedy attacks as soon as possible.

To help manage IOAs, Advanced EDR gives each one a status which can be manually edited by the administrator:

  • Pending: The IOA is pending investigation and/or resolution. The administrator must verify whether the attack is real and take the necessary measures to mitigate it. All new IOAs are created with the status ‘Pending’.

  • Archived: The IOA has already been investigated by the administrator and the remedial actions have been taken, or were unnecessary as it was a false positive. The administrator closes the IOA for any of these reasons.

Advanced EDR shows relevant IOA information, such as the MITRE tactic and technique used, the events recorded on the computer that generated the IOA, and, if available, the following reports:

  • Advanced attack investigation: Includes information about the computer involved, a detailed description of the tactics and techniques used, recommendations to mitigate the attack, and the sequence of events that triggered the generation of the IOA. See Fields in the IOA details page.

  • Attack graph: Includes an interactive diagram with the sequence of events that led to the generation of the IOA. See Graphs.

Reports are available for a month after the IOA is generated. After this period, you can no longer access them. The report also shows events that are part of the attack during the thirty days prior to detection of the IOA.

Advanced indicator of attack

Advanced indicators of attack provide in-depth monitoring of the applications on your computers. They enable you to detect suspicious behavior, analyze the events generated by applications, and determine if an event is an IOA.

The mere presence of this type of indicator of attack does not mean that an attack is taking place. You must analyze the advanced indicator of attack to determine whether it is an attack or not.

Advanced EDR shows relevant information about advanced IOAs, such as the MITRE tactics and techniques used, and the sequence of events logged on the computer that generated the IOA.

Advanced indicators of attack are compatible only with Windows computers.

Compatibility of advanced indicators of attack with third-party security solutions

Cytomic follows all standards recommended by OS manufacturers to make sure its security products can coexist seamlessly with other antivirus and EDR solutions on customer computers. Advanced IOAs are implemented using hooks. If multiple security solutions that use this interception technology exist on a computer, there might be compatibility issues. To resolve this, disable all hook-based technologies in the security product installed on the user computer.

In Advanced EDR, the technologies that use hooks are:

CKC (Cyber Kill Chain)

In 2011, Lockheed-Martin drafted a framework or model for defending computer networks. This framework stated that cyberattacks occur in phases and each of them can be interrupted through certain controls. Since then, the Cyber Kill Chain (CKC) has been adopted by IT security organizations to define the phases of cyberattacks. These phases range from remote reconnaissance of the target assets to data exfiltration.

MITRE Corporation

The MITRE Corporation is a not-for-profit company that operates federally-funded Research and Development centers to address security issues. It offers practical solutions in the fields of defense and intelligence, aviation, civil systems, national security, judiciary, health, and cybersecurity. The MITRE Corporation is the creator of the ATT&CK framework.

ATT&CK (Adversarial Tactics, Techniques, and Common Knowledge)

ATT&CK (Adversarial Tactics, Techniques, and Common Knowledge) is a set of resources developed by the MITRE Corporation to describe and categorize cybercriminal activities based on observations from around the world. ATT&CK is a structured list of known attack behaviors categorized into tactics and techniques and shown as a matrix. The MITRE ATT&CK matrix is a useful resource to develop defensive, preventive, and remedial strategies for organizations. For more information about the ATT&CK matrix, go to https://attack.mitre.org/.

Technique (How)

In ATT&CK terminology, techniques represent the method (or the strategy) that an adversary uses to achieve a tactical objective. In other words, the ‘how’. For example, to access credentials (tactic), an adversary executes a data dump (technique).

Sub-Technique (How)

In ATT&CK terminology, sub-techniques represent the “how” of a specific technique. They refer to the processes or mechanisms used by adversaries to achieve the objective of a tactic. For example, password spraying is a type of brute force attack to accomplish the objective of the Credential Access tactic.

Tactic (Why)

In ATT&CK terminology, tactics represent the ultimate motive or goal of a technique. It is the tactical objective of the adversary: the reason to take an action.