Today’s companies face many security challenges to their networks, and a company’s incident manager needs to be ready to respond to potential threats. Some of those threats can occur from the actions of well-intentioned employees who fail to follow security protocols, and others can arise from disgruntled workers who may be able to access accounts on personal devices long after leaving an organization.
Wireless devices and bring your own device (BYOD) computing in the workplace often increase productivity and convenience, but such ease of access to resources can be a significant threat to organizational security, and BYOD computing adds another layer of concern for the incident manager.
Remote management, such as tracking and data swipes, helps to locate devices containing company data and to eliminate any unauthorized viewing of that data. Authentication, access controls, and strong encryption are just some of the security measures that need to be part of a secure wireless network and mobile device management practices in the workplace. However, security will need to evolve in order to protect against employees who may have malicious intent. It will need to include behavior cues as well as effective countermeasures, as the need for greater employee availability drives more wireless computing and BYOD integration in the workplace.
For this project, you will take a close look at the variety of threats facing an incident manager as you develop a cybersecurity incident report (CIR) for management with an executive summary.
There are seven steps to complete the project. Each step will highlight the types of threats you will encounter. Most steps in this project should take no more than two hours to complete, and the project as a whole should take no more than two weeks. Begin with the workplace scenario and then continue to Step 1.
Step 1: Develop a Wireless and BYOD Security Plan
Since the company you work for has instituted a bring your own device (BYOD) policy, security attitudes have been lax, and all sorts of devices, authorized and unauthorized, have been found connected to the company’s wireless infrastructure. In this first step, you will develop a wireless and BYOD security plan for the company.
Use the NIST Guidelines for Securing Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) Special Publication 800-153 to provide an executive summary to answer other security concerns related to BYOD and wireless. Within your cybersecurity incident report, discuss why the security of wireless access points is important. Provide answers to the threat of unauthorized equipment or rogue access points on the company wireless network and the methods to find other rogue access points. Describe how to detect rogue access points and how they can actually connect to the network. Describe how to identify authorized access points within your network.
Within your plan, include how the Cyber Kill Chain framework and approach could be used to improve the incident response times for networks.
Include this at the beginning of your CIR as the basis for all wireless- and BYOD-related problems within the network. Title the section “Wireless and BYOD Security Plan.”
Step 3: Develop a Continuous Improvement Plan
Now that you’ve completed the section on tracking suspicious behavior for your CIR, you are confronted with another situation in the workplace.
You receive a memo for continuous improvement to the wireless network of your company, and you are asked to provide a report on the company’s wireless network. You have been monitoring the activities on WPA2. Provide for your leadership a description of Wi-Fi protected access (WPA) networks and include the pros and cons of each type of wireless network with a focus on WPA2.
Since WPA2 uses encryption to provide secure communications, define the scheme for using pre shared keys for encryption. Is this FIPS 140-2 compliant, and if not, what is necessary to attain this? Include this for leadership. Include a list of other wireless protocols, such as Bluetooth, and provide a comparative analysis of four protocols including the pros, cons, and suitability for your company.
Include your responses as part of the CIR with the title “Continuous Improvement Plan.”
In the next step, you will look at yet another workplace scenario, and you will use that incident to show management how remote configuration management works.
Step 4: Develop Remote Configuration Management
You’ve completed the continuous improvement plan portion of the CIR. Now, it’s time to show how your company has implemented remote configuration management.
Start your incident report with a description of remote configuration management and how it is used in maintaining the security posture of your company’s network. Then, consider the following scenario:
An undocumented device is found on the company network. You have determined that the owner of the device should be removed from the network. Implement this and explain how you would remove the employee’s device. How would you show proof that the device was removed?
Include your responses as part of the CIR with the title “Remote Configuration Management.”
In the next step, you will illustrate how you investigate possible employee misconduct.
Step 5: Investigate Employee Misconduct
In this portion of your CIR report, you will show how you would investigate possible employee misconduct. You have been given a report that an employee has recorded log-ins during unofficial duty hours. The employee has set up access through an ad hoc wireless network. Provide a definition of ad hoc wireless networks and identify how such networks could contribute to the company infrastructure while also detailing the threats and vulnerabilities they bring. Use notional information or actual case data and discuss.
Address self-configuring dynamic networks on open access architecture and the threats and vulnerabilities associated with them, as well as the possible protections that should be implemented. From your position as an incident manager, how would you detect an employee connecting to a self-configuring network or an ad hoc network? Provide this information in the report. How would signal hiding be a countermeasure for wireless networks? What are the countermeasures for signal hiding? How is the service set identifier (SSID) used by cybersecurity professionals on wireless networks? Are these always broadcast, and if not, why not? How would you validate that the user is working outside of business hours?
Include your responses as part of the CIR with the title “Employee Misconduct.”
In the next step, you will use lab tools to analyze wireless traffic.
Step 6: Analyze Wireless Traffic
DON’T WORRY ABOUT IT
Step 7: Prepare and Submit the Cybersecurity Incident Report and Executive Summary
You’ve completed all of the individual steps for your cybersecurity incident report. It’s time to combine the reports you completed in the previous steps into a single CIR.
The assignments for this project are as follows:
- Cybersecurity Incident Report (CIR): Your report should be a minimum 14-page double-spaced Word document with citations in APA format. The page count does not include figures, diagrams, tables, or citations.
- Executive summary: This is a one-page summary at the beginning of your CIR.
- Lab report: A document sharing your lab experience and providing screenshots to demonstrate that you performed the lab. Attach it to the CIR as an artifact.
Submit both documents to the assignment folder after reading the instructions below