Risk Management - Time to blow it up and start over? - Alex Hutton

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Risk Management Time to blow it up and start over? @alexhutton

description

Now that the industry is trying to formalize the concept of risk management into neat little compartments like standards (ISO 27005/31000), certifications (CRISC) and products (GRC) guess what? We're doing it wrong. Fundamentally wrong. This talk will discuss why all this current risk management stuff is goofy and what sort of alternatives we have that might help us understand our ability to protect, our tendancy towards failure, and how to match that up with what management will stomach.

Transcript of Risk Management - Time to blow it up and start over? - Alex Hutton

Page 1: Risk Management - Time to blow it up and start over? - Alex Hutton

Risk ManagementTime to blow it up and start over?

@alexhutton

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Met E.T. Jaynesprobability theory, the logic of science

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Kuhn’s Protoscience A stage in the development of a science that is described by:

• somewhat random fact gathering (mainly of readily accessible data)

• a “morass” of interesting, trivial, irrelevant observations

• A variety of theories (that are spawned from what he calls philosophical speculation) that provide little guidance to data gathering

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only the wisest and stupidest of men never changeConfucius

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Destroy GRCMusings of a Risk Management Deconstructivist

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A feeling of diss-connect between GRC and Security

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let’s talk governance

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governance, without metrics & models, is superstitiongovernance, with metrics & models, describes capability to manage risk

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Why does what you execute on and how you execute matter?

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governance, without metrics & models, is superstitiongovernance, with metrics & models, describes capability to manage risk

measurably good governance practices (can/will) reduce riskmeasurably good governance is simply a description of capability to manage risk

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not sucking eggs at security is a good idea

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compliance*, without metrics, is superstitioncompliance*, with metrics, is risk management

*(regulatory)

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But “GRC” Risk Management

Find issue, call issue bad, fix issue, hope you don’t find it again...

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What is risk?

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a. Risk is notionalb. Risk is tangible

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Problems with “tangible”

- complex systems, complexity science

- usefulness outside of the very specific

- measurements

- lots of belief statements

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How Complex Systems Fail (Being a Short Treatise on the Nature of Failure; How Failure is Evaluated; How Failure is Attributed to Proximate Cause; and the Resulting New Understanding of Patient Safety)

Richard I. Cook, MD Cognitive technologies Laboratory University of Chicago

http://www.ctlab.org/documents/How%20Complex%20Systems%20Fail.pdf

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Catastrophe requires multiple failures single point failures are not enough..

The array of defenses works. System operations are generally successful. Overt catastrophic failure occurs when small, apparently innocuous failures join to create opportunity for a systemic accident. Each of these small failures is necessary to cause catastrophe but only the combination is sufficient to permit failure. Put another way, there are many more failure opportunities than overt system accidents. Most initial failure trajectories are blocked by designed system safety components. Trajectories that reach the operational level are mostly blocked, usually by practitioners.

Complex systems contain changing mixtures of failures latent within them.

The complexity of these systems makes it impossible for them to run without multiple flaws being present. Because these are individually insufficient to cause failure they are regarded as minor factors during operations. Eradication of all latent failures is limited primarily by economic cost but also because it is difficult before the fact to see how such failures might contribute to an accident. The failures change constantly because of changing technology, work organization, and efforts to eradicate failures.

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Complex systems run in degraded mode.

Post-accident attribution accident to a ‘root cause’ is fundamentally wrong. All practitioner actions are gambles.

Human expertise in complex systems is constantly changing

Change introduces new forms of failure.

Views of ‘cause’ limit the effectiveness of defenses against future events.

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Problems with “notional”

- becomes difficult to extract wisdom - we want a “Gross Domestic Product”

- unable to be defended

- pseudo-scientific

- lots of belief statements

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from Mark Curphey’s SecurityBullshit

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What is risk?

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uses of “risk”

- engineering - complex systems says “no”

- financial - no 110% return on your firewall

- medical - requires data

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our standards say:

Find issue, call issue bad, fix issue, hope you don’t find it again...

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Managing risk means aligning the capabilities of the organization, and the exposure of the organization with the tolerance of the data owners

- Jack Jones

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evidence based medicine, meet information security

What is evidence-based risk management?

a deconstructed, notional view of risk

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Threat Landscape

Controls Landscape

Loss Landscape

Asset Landscape

risk

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Threat Landscape

Controls Landscape

Loss Landscape

Asset Landscape

risk

a balanced scorecard?

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Threat Landscape

Controls Landscape

Loss Landscape

Asset Landscape

risk

a balanced scorecard?

capability (destroys “g” introducing quality management & mgmt. science elements into infosec)

exposure

change

“compliance” simply becomes a factor of loss landscape and/or operating as a control group for comparative data

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The Achilles heel again, lack of data

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Models and data sharingGood Lord Of The Dance, something a vendor might actually help you with

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Verizon Incident Sharing Frameworkit’s open*!

* kinda

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Verizon has shared data

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- 2009 – over 600 cases

- 2010 – between 1000 & 1400

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Verizon is sharing our framework

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What is the Verizon Incident Sharing (VerIS) Framework?

- A means to create metrics from the incident narrative

- how Verizon creates measurements for the DBIR

- how *anyone* can create measurements from an incident

- http://securityblog.verizonbusiness.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/VerIS_Framework_Beta_1.pdf

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What makes up the VerIS framework?

- Demographics- Incident Classification

- Event Modeling (a4)

- Discovery & Mitigation- Impact Classification

- Impact Modeling

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Cybertrust Security

demographics - company industry

- company size

- geographic location

- of business unit in incident

- size of security department

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Cybertrust Security

incident classification - agent- what acts against us

- asset- what the agent acts

against

- action- what the agent does to the

asset

- attribute- the result of the agent’s

action against the asset

agent

action

asset

attribute

external

partner

internal

hackingmalware

socialphysical

misuseerror

environmental

typefunction

confidentiality

availability

integrity

possession

utility

authenticity

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Cybertrust Security

the series of events (a4) creates an “attack model”

1 2 3 4 5> > > >

incident classification a4 event model

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Cybertrust Security

discovery & mitigation - incident timeline

- discovery method

- evidence sources

- control capability

- corrective action- most straightforward manner

in which the incident could be prevented

- the cost of preventative controls

+

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Cybertrust Security

Impact classification - impact categorization- sources of Impact

(direct, indirect)

- similar to iso 27005/FAIR

- impact estimation- distribution for

amount of impact

- impact qualification- relative impact

rating

$

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Cybertrust Security

$ $ $+demographics incident classification (a4) discovery

& mitigation impact classification

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incident narrative incident metrics

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Cybertrust Security

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& mitigation impact classification

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case studies data set

a

b

c

d

e

f

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Cybertrust Security

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data set knowledge & wisdom

a

b

c

d

e

f

demographics incident classification (a4) discovery& mitigation impact classification

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Cybertrust Security

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threat modeling

a

b

c

d

e

f

demographics incident classification (a4) discovery& mitigation impact classification

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Cybertrust Security

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threat modeling

a

b

c

d

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f

demographics incident classification (a4) discovery& mitigation impact classification

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Cybertrust Security

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impact modeling

a

b

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demographics incident classification (a4) discovery& mitigation impact classification

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Cybertrust Security

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impact modeling

a

b

c

d

e

f

demographics incident classification (a4) discovery& mitigation impact classification

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Problems:

Data sharing, incidents, privacy

Failures vs. Successes(where management capability helps)

Talking to the business owner(might still need a “tangible approach here, but pseudo-actuarial data can help - we still want a GDP)

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Successes:

Bridge the gap(IRM becomes tactically actionable based on threat/attack modeling)

(Capability measurements bridged to notional increase/decrease in risk)

(complex system problems addressed by showing multiple sources of causes)

Accurate, notional likelihood

Accurate tangible impact

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Requirements:Data Sets

Models

Technology

Sciences - complexity, management/TQM/Probability/Game Theory, biomimicry...