Software Exploits Aren't Needed To Hack Most Organizations (darkreading.com)
The five most common ways of hacking an organization all involve stolen credentials, "based on data from 75 organizations, 100 penetration tests, and 450 real-world attacks," writes an anonymous Slashdot reader. In fact, 66% of the researchers' successful attacks involved cracking a weak domain user password. From an article on Dark Reading:
Playing whack-a-mole with software vulnerabilities should not be top of security pros' priority list because exploiting software doesn't even rank among the top five plays in the attacker's playbook, according to a new report from Praetorian. Organizations would be far better served by improving credential management and network segmentation...
"If we assume that 1 percent [of users] will click on the [malicious] link, what will we do next?" says Joshua Abraham, practice manager at Praetorian. The report suggests specific mitigation tactics organizations should take in response to each one of these attacks -- tactics that may not stop attackers from stealing credentials, but "building in the defenses so it's really not a big deal if they do"... [O]ne stolen password should not give an attacker (or pen tester) the leverage to access an organization's entire computing environment, exfiltrating all documents along the way.
Similar results were reported in Verizon's 2016 Data Breach Investigations Report.
"If we assume that 1 percent [of users] will click on the [malicious] link, what will we do next?" says Joshua Abraham, practice manager at Praetorian. The report suggests specific mitigation tactics organizations should take in response to each one of these attacks -- tactics that may not stop attackers from stealing credentials, but "building in the defenses so it's really not a big deal if they do"... [O]ne stolen password should not give an attacker (or pen tester) the leverage to access an organization's entire computing environment, exfiltrating all documents along the way.
Similar results were reported in Verizon's 2016 Data Breach Investigations Report.
exploiting software doesn't even rank among the top five plays in the attacker's playbook
Only *because* you've been "Playing whack-a-mole with software vulnerabilities". If you stop applying patches, using exploits would be more productive.
09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
Compartmentalization carries its own dangers. The idea is sound: only give people access to the systems and documents they need access to. The problem is that you'll never know beforehand which systems and documents those are. So, you need access to Doc X? "I know it takes 2 weeks to process an access request for this folder, so why don't I just email you the thing. Or I can email my credentials so you can access it with those". If your security measures get in the way of people doing their jobs, they will work around it.
If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...