Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs) and the Failure of Prevention
Starts: Friday 25 February 2011, 7:29PM
Finishes: Friday 25 February 2011, 8:30PM
Venue: Australian Institute of
Management, Management House , Corner Boundary & Rosa
Streets, Spring Hill Brisbane QLD 4000
Topic: Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs) and
the Failure of Prevention
Today's advanced persistent threats (APT) evade both detection
and prevention by current approaches to network security - whether
you want to believe it or not. Most organisations have developed an
over-reliance upon network-layer, perimeter-focused solutions that
require signatures or statistical-based foreknowledge of each
technical threat. As proven through endless security breaches over
the last few years, most legacy solutions are obsolete with each
new action of focused adversaries such as cyber criminals and
nation-state groups, and because of their ever-changing methods,
including targeted and zero-day malware, obfuscation, and covert
network channels.
This session focuses on the true nature and sources of today's
advanced threats, and describes solution characteristics, both
technology and operations-related, which are required to combat
these threats and close critical network visibility gaps. Mr
Schwartz will demonstrate techniques that will enable your
organisation to identify and stop zero-day malware, targeted
attacks, and sophisticated data leakage, and to improve overall
network visibility. The session will utilise actual technical case
studies from leading commercial and public sector organisations to
illustrate highly effective operational methods for enterprise
network security monitoring.
Attendees will learn:
- The true nature and sources of threats facing public and
private organisations and the gaps in current network
visibility.
- The technical reasons that advanced persistent threats are
evading current perimeter-based point solutions such as IDS, log
monitoring and flow-based technologies.
- A new approach to enterprise network monitoring and incident
response.
- Specific examples of adversary exploits (demonstrations)
similar to trends observed within organised crime groups and
state-sponsored attacks.
Speaker: Mr Eddie Schwartz
Mr Schwartz is Chief Security Officer of NetWitness and has 25
years experience in the information security and privacy fields.
Previously, he was CTO of ManTech Security Technologies
Corporation, EVP and General Manager for Global Integrity, SVP of
Operations at Guardent, CISO for Nationwide Insurance; and as a
Senior Computer Scientist at CSC he was Technical Director of the
DSS Information Security Laboratory. Mr Schwartz has advised a
number of security companies, and served on the Executive Committee
for the Banking Information Technology Secretariat (BITS). Mr
Schwartz has a B.I.S. in Information Security Management and an
M.S. in Information Technology Management from the George Mason
University School of Management.
Many thanks to our sponsors:
AISA thanks Business
Aspect for sponsoring this meeting.