“Practical Intrusion Analysis provides a solid fundamental overview of the art and science of intrusion analysis.”
–Nate Miller, Cofounder, Stratum Security
The Only Definitive Guide to New State-of-the-Art Techniques in Intrusion Detection and Prevention
Recently, powerful innovations in intrusion detection and prevention have evolved in response to emerging threats and changing business environments. However, security practitioners have found little reliable, usable information about these new IDS/IPS technologies. In Practical Intrusion Analysis, one of the field’s leading experts brings together these innovations for the first time and demonstrates how they can be used to analyze attacks, mitigate damage, and track attackers.
Ryan Trost reviews the fundamental techniques and business drivers of intrusion detection and prevention by analyzing today’s new vulnerabilities and attack vectors. Next, he presents complete explanations of powerful new IDS/IPS methodologies based on Network Behavioral Analysis (NBA), data visualization, geospatial analysis, and more.
Writing for security practitioners and managers at all experience levels, Trost introduces new solutions for virtually every environment. Coverage includes
- Assessing the strengths and limitations of mainstream monitoring tools and IDS technologies
- Using Attack Graphs to map paths of network vulnerability and becoming more proactive about preventing intrusions
- Analyzing network behavior to immediately detect polymorphic worms, zero-day exploits, and botnet DoS attacks
- Understanding the theory, advantages, and disadvantages of the latest Web Application Firewalls
- Implementing IDS/IPS systems that protect wireless data traffic
- Enhancing your intrusion detection efforts by converging with physical security defenses
- Identifying attackers’ “geographical fingerprints” and using that information to respond more effectively
- Visualizing data traffic to identify suspicious patterns more quickly
- Revisiting intrusion detection ROI in light of new threats, compliance risks, and technical alternatives
Includes contributions from these leading network security experts:
Jeff Forristal, a.k.a. Rain Forest Puppy, senior security professional and creator of libwhisker
Seth Fogie, CEO, Airscanner USA; leading-edge mobile security researcher; coauthor of Security Warrior
Dr. Sushil Jajodia, Director, Center for Secure Information Systems; founding Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Computer Security
Dr. Steven Noel, Associate Director and Senior Research Scientist, Center for Secure Information Systems, George Mason University
Alex Kirk, Member, Sourcefire Vulnerability Research Team
Table of Contents:
Preface xv
Chapter 1: Network Overview 1
Chapter 2: Infrastructure Monitoring 31
Chapter 3: Intrusion Detection Systems 53
Chapter 4: Lifecycle of a Vulnerability 87
Chapter 5: Proactive Intrusion Prevention and Response via Attack Graphs 119
Chapter 6: Network Flows and Anomaly Detection 151
Chapter 7: Web Application Firewalls 185
Chapter 8: Wireless IDS/IPS 209
Chapter 9: Physical Intrusion Detection for IT 235
Chapter 10: Geospatial Intrusion Detection 275
Chapter 11: Visual Data Communications 347
Chapter 12: Return on Investment: Business Justification 391
Appendix: Bro Installation Guide 435
Index 441
About the Author :
Ryan Trost is the Director of Security and Data Privacy Officer at Comprehensive Health Services where he oversees all the organization’s security and privacy decisions. He teaches several Information Technology courses, including Ethical Hacking, Intrusion Detection, and Data Visualization at Northern Virginia Community College. This enables him to continue exploring his technical interests among the endless managerial meetings. In his spare time, Ryan works to cross-pollinate network security, GIS, and data visualization. He is considered a leading expert in geospatial intrusion detection techniques and has spoken at several conferences on the topic, most notably DEFCON 16. Ryan participated as a RedTeamer in the first annual Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition (CCDC) and now fields a team of students in the annual event. Ryan has been a senior security consultant for several government agencies before transitioning over to the private sector. In 2005, Ryan received his masters of science degree in computer science from George Washington University where he developed his first geospatial intrusion detection tool.