Intelligent CIO Middle East Issue 30 | Page 35

+ EDITOR’S QUESTION WARREN MERCER, SECURITY RESEARCHER, CISCO TALOS ///////////////// W e often call intelligence important within the cybersecurity world. It’s not so often we think about why it’s important or how we suddenly deem it so important within this space. The importance of leveraging cyberthreat intelligence now is paramount. The modern attackers are improving all the time. Their attacks are becoming increasingly sophisticated and to that end the best weapon that the cybersecurity industry can have in our pocket is that of intelligence. To quickly understand what intelligence is, we should try to think of it in the traditional sense. The military have always used intelligence to allow them to make decisions based on enemy movements and to allow them to decide their course of action. The cybersecurity world is no different. The intelligence we use every day is to try and thwart our adversaries. The battle against cybercrime is one of constant evolution. What needs to be understood is the difference between commodity intelligence that people can find on the Internet, subscribe from feeds etc and the ability to be able to actually turn it into actionable intelligence. The ability to have an outcome from your intelligence is vital. Having intelligence that you can use to defend your infrastructure is your end game. This is what you want to be able to do. This is what gives you the best return of any gathered intelligence. Cyberthreat intelligence is very important as soon as you begin to understand the distinction between ‘obtaining’ it and ‘using’ it; once you begin to use your intelligence you can start to arm yourself with a better understanding of threats that are pertinent to you and thus allow yourself to suitably defend against. www.intelligentcio.com This is how the organisations can defend their infrastructure. Understanding an attack through the use of intelligence allows the organisation to be aware of how that attack happened and also any associated indicators they can use to try and protect themselves. At Cisco Talos we publish all our indicators to allow others, including non-Cisco customers, to be able to defend their infrastructure. Intelligence in the cybersecurity world is important. The collaborative nature of the industry needs to change. When we can all band together, where possible, we create better intelligence. Collaboration through trust groups, third party intelligence partners, customers and even individuals can be the difference between identifying a threat/attack and not. This is the hardest part for the intelligence community to get right as there cannot be a carte-blanche share all approach as individual and customer intelligence is important to keep secure and private. However, the ability to work together is something that is improving. At Cisco Talos we work with a large number of intelligence partners throughout the world and we will continue to do so to ensure we’re improving our own capabilities around detection and identification of new, unseen and bleeding edge threats. INTELLIGENTCIO 35