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Digital Forensics and Incident Response

You're reading from   Digital Forensics and Incident Response Incident response tools and techniques for effective cyber threat response

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803238678
Length 532 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Gerard Johansen Gerard Johansen
Author Profile Icon Gerard Johansen
Gerard Johansen
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Table of Contents (28) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Foundations of Incident Response and Digital Forensics
2. Chapter 1: Understanding Incident Response FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Managing Cyber Incidents 4. Chapter 3: Fundamentals of Digital Forensics 5. Chapter 4: Investigation Methodology 6. Part 2: Evidence Acquisition
7. Chapter 5: Collecting Network Evidence 8. Chapter 6: Acquiring Host-Based Evidence 9. Chapter 7: Remote Evidence Collection 10. Chapter 8: Forensic Imaging 11. Part 3: Evidence Analysis
12. Chapter 9: Analyzing Network Evidence 13. Chapter 10: Analyzing System Memory 14. Chapter 11: Analyzing System Storage 15. Chapter 12: Analyzing Log Files 16. Chapter 13: Writing the Incident Report 17. Part 4: Ransomware Incident Response
18. Chapter 14: Ransomware Preparation and Response 19. Chapter 15: Ransomware Investigations 20. Part 5: Threat Intelligence and Hunting
21. Chapter 16: Malware Analysis for Incident Response 22. Chapter 17: Leveraging Threat Intelligence 23. Chapter 18: Threat Hunting 24. Assessments 25. Index 26. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix

Threat hunting overview

Threat hunting is a developing discipline, driven in large part by the availability of threat intelligence along with tools, such as Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) and SIEM platforms, that can be leveraged to hunt for threats at the scale of today’s modern enterprise architectures. What has developed out of this is specific working cycles and maturity models that can guide organizations through the process of starting and executing a threat hunting program.

Threat hunt cycle

Threat hunting, like incident response, is a process-driven exercise. There is not a clearly defined and accepted process in place, but there is a general sequence that threat hunting takes that provides a process that can be followed. The following diagram combines the various stages of a threat hunt into a process that guides threat hunters through the various activities to facilitate an accurate and complete hunt:

Figure 18.1 – Threat hunt...

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