In this article, we highlight the Advanced Steps outlined on the NCSC website in relation to the guidance.
The threat an organisation faces may vary over time. At any point, there is a need to strike a balance between the current threat, the measures needed to defend against it, the implications and cost of those defences and the overall risk this presents to the organisation.
There may be times when the cyber threat to an organisation is greater than usual. Moving to heightened alert can:
This guidance explains in what circumstances the cyber threat might change, and outlines the steps an organisation can take in response to a heightened cyber threat.
An organisation’s view of its cyber risk might change if new information emerges that the threat has heightened. This might be because of a temporary uplift in adversary capability if for example there is a zero-day vulnerability in a widely used service that capable threat actors are actively exploiting. Or it could be more specific to a particular organisation, sector or even country, resulting from hacktivism or geopolitical tensions.
These diverse factors mean that organisations of all sizes must take steps to ensure they can respond to these events. It is rare for an organisation to be able to influence the threat level, so actions usually focus on reducing your vulnerability to attack in the first place and reducing the impact of a successful attack.
Even the most sophisticated and determined attacker will use known vulnerabilities, misconfigurations or credential attacks (such as password spraying, attempting use of breached passwords or authentication token reuse) if they can. Removing their ability to use these techniques can reduce the cyber risk to your organisation.
In addition, those organisations with more resources available should also consider the following steps:
Large organisations should carry out all the actions outlined above, to ensure that the most fundamental security measures are in place. Organisations and sector regulators using the Cyber Assessment Framework to help them understand cyber risk should note that the CAF contains guidance on all the areas included in the actions above. If your organisation has deprioritised these areas of the CAF, you are advised to revisit those decisions immediately when the threat is heightened.
The most important thing for organisations of all sizes is to make sure that the fundamentals of cyber security are in place to protect their devices, networks and systems. The actions below are about ensuring that basic cyber hygiene controls are in place and functioning correctly. This is important under all circumstances but critical during periods of heightened cyber threat.
An organisation is unlikely to be able to make widespread system changes quickly in response to a change in threat, but organisations should make every effort to implement these actions as a priority.
See NCSC website for full details on the following sections:
You may also enjoy reading, The definitions of “recently” and “discovered” leave a lot to be desired
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This post was last modified on 17 January 2022 4:24 PM
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