5 Tips for Prioritizing Vulnerabilities Based on Risk
In part three of our six-part blog series on improving your cybersecurity strategy, we discuss the challenges organizations face in pinpointing those vulnerabilities which pose the greatest threat to their business, and offer five tips for improving your prioritization efforts.
The number of vulnerabilities has nearly doubled in the past two years. But the number of vulnerabilities being exploited is only a small fraction of the total. Achieving an accurate view of your entire attack surface, so you can effectively respond to those vulnerabilities which represent the greatest threat to your organization, requires a new approach we call Cyber Exposure.
The discipline of Cyber Exposure depends on your ability to accurately answer four key questions:
- Where are we exposed?
- How should we prioritize based on risk?
- How are we reducing our exposure over time?
- How do we compare to our peers?
In part two of our six-part series, we explored ways to answer the question “where are we exposed?” Once you’ve gained an accurate view of your entire attack surface, it’s time to consider how to prioritize your vulnerability response strategy. Since no two organizations are alike, this requires understanding the level of business threat each vulnerability poses to the critical assets in your particular organization.
Read the complete Cyber Exposure blog series:
4 Cybersecurity Questions Every CISO Should Be Ready to Answer
3 Tips for Identifying Your Organization’s Cyber Exposure Gap
5 Tips for Prioritizing Vulnerabilities Based on Risk
Metrics and Maturity: Benchmarking Your Cyber Exposure Over Time
How Do Your Cyber Exposure Practices Stack Up to Those of Your Peers?
Cyber Exposure: Taking a Holistic Approach to Vulnerability Management
For example, let’s say you encounter a vulnerability with a “critical” CVSS score. Yet, when you begin to investigate its true threat, it turns out the vulnerability doesn’t present such a significant risk to your business after all. Perhaps there are characteristics that make it unappealing to the criminal element for widespread exploitation. Maybe it affects an application or asset type which has a low level of criticality for your day-to-day operations. Or involves an app that’s effectively air-gapped so as not to pose a threat. It’s only when you are able to accurately make such a risk-based assessment of vulnerabilities that you can truly being to improve your response process.
Assessing Risk: By the Numbers
The idea of conducting a threat-centric evaluation of each vulnerability seems daunting when you consider the thousands disclosed annually. There were some 16,500 new vulnerabilities in 2018, of which only 7% had a public exploit available and an even smaller subset were ever weaponized by threat actors. The Tenable data science team estimates only 3% of vulnerabilities will be exploited. Put another way, it means that only a small percentage of the thousands of vulnerabilities disclosed every year pose a legitimate threat.
At a time when organizations of all sizes are challenged to keep their cybersecurity teams adequately staffed, being able to prioritize your vulnerability response tactics is more essential than ever. According to the report Measuring and Managing the Business Costs of Cyber Risk, conducted by Ponemon Institute on behalf of Tenable, the majority of organizations say the security function does not have adequate staffing to scan vulnerabilities in a timely manner. Without effective response prioritization, how can you know where to invest limited resources and personnel to protect your organization’s most critical assets?
5 Steps for Effective Vulnerability Prioritization
Effective prioritization requires complete visibility into your attack surface. Once you’ve achieved that, taking these five steps will kickstart your prioritization efforts:
- Prioritize your threat responses based on the vulnerabilities for which exploits are currently happening -- or for which you can expect activity in the near future -- based on predictive probability analysis. You’ll need continuous situational awareness and threat context in order to make this assessment.
- Let data drive your decisions. When you’re armed with a quantified analysis of vulnerabilities and where attackers have the lead, you’ll be well informed about where to respond first.
- Maintain a fluid response priority list to allow for the inclusion and proper ranking of emerging threats.
- Keep an updated inventory of critical assets so you know precisely what is at risk and where attackers are most likely to take aim. This can also help improve your backup and recovery plans.
- Replace the current start-stop models and discrete cycles with continuous security assessments and response prioritization models. Align operational processes to support rapid response. Be sure to also support ad hoc remediation and mitigation requests rather than just focus on those stemming from regular maintenance and patch windows.
Remember, your priorities will change regularly based on constantly shifting data about the day’s greatest threats and your own organization’s internal security status. Having effective processes in place will help you make risk prioritization an intrinsic part of your Cyber Exposure practice.
In part one of our six-part blog series on improving your cybersecurity strategy, we explored 4 Cybersecurity Questions Every CISO Should Be Ready to Answer. In part two, we covered 3 Tips for Identifying Your Organization’s Cyber Exposure Gap. In part four, we’ll explore how to reduce your organization’s exposure over time.
Learn more
Read the complete Cyber Exposure blog series:
- 4 Cybersecurity Questions Every CISO Should Be Ready to Answer
- 3 Tips for Identifying Your Organization’s Cyber Exposure Gap
- 5 Tips for Prioritizing Vulnerabilities Based on Risk
- Metrics and Maturity: Benchmarking Your Cyber Exposure Over Time
- How Do Your Cyber Exposure Practices Stack Up to Those of Your Peers?
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