The incident response process

There is a general path that cyber security incidents follow during their lifetime. If the organization has a mature incident response capability, they will have taken measures to ensure they are prepared to address an incident at each stage of the process. Each incident starts with the first time the organization becomes aware of an event or series of events indicative of malicious activity. This detection can come in the form of a security control alert or external party informing the organization of a potential security issue. Once alerted, the organization moves through analyzing the incident through containment measures to bring the information system back to normal operations. The following diagram shows how these flow in a cycle with Preparation as the starting point. Closer examination reveals that every incident is used to better prepare the organization for future incidents as the Post-Incident Activity, and is utilized in the preparation for the next incident:

The incident response process can be broken down into six distinct phases, each with a set of actions the organization can take to address the incident:

In other instances, users may be the first to indicate a potential security incident. This may be as simple as an employee contacting the help desk and informing a help desk technician that they received an Excel spreadsheet from an unknown source and opened it. They are now complaining that their files on the local system are being encrypted. In each case, an organization would have to escalate each of these events to the level of an incident (which we will cover a little later in this chapter) and begin the reactive process to investigate and remediate.

Once the evidence is collected, it then needs be examined. There are a variety of tools to conduct this analysis, many of which are explored in this book. With these tools, analysts are attempting to ascertain what happened, what it affected, whether any other systems were involved, and whether any confidential data was removed. The ultimate goal of the analysis is to determine the root cause of the incident and reconstruct the actions of the threat actor from initial compromise to detection.

Finally, the organizational personnel should update their own incident response processes with any new information developed during the post-incident debrief and reporting. This incorporation of lessons learned is important as it makes future responses to incidents more effective.