In Depth

A Few Good Information Security Metrics

Andrew Jaquith says information security metrics don't have to rely on heavy-duty math to be effective, but they also don't have to be dumbed down to red, yellow, green. Here are five smart measurements--and effective ways to present them.

By Scott Berinato

Page 5

How to get it: Using commonly available password cracking programs, attempt to break into systems with weak passwords. Go about this methodically, first attacking desktops, then servers or admin systems. Or go by business unit. You should classify your devices and spend more time attempting to break the passwords to the more important systems. "If it's a game of capture the flag," Jaquith says, "the flag is with the domain controller, so you want stronger access control there, obviously."

Expressed as: Length of time or average length of time required to break passwords. (For example, admin systems averaged 12 hours to crack.) Can be combined with a percentage for a workgroup view (for example, 20 percent of accounts in business unit cracked in less than 10 minutes). Is your password subject to a lunchtime attack? That is, can it be cracked in the 45 minutes you are away from your desk to nosh?

Not good for: User admonishment, judgment. The point of this exercise is not to punish offending users, but to improve your security. Skip the public floggings and just quietly make sure employees stop using their mother's maiden name for access.

Try this: Use password cracking as an awareness-program audit tool. Set up two groups (maybe business units). Give one group password training. The other group is a control; it doesn't get training. After several months and password resets, try to crack the passwords in both groups to see if the training led to better passwords.

One possible visualization: Both YAH and small multiples graphics could work with this metric. (See the graphics for Metric 1 and Metric 2.)

metric 4: Platform Compliance Scores

Widely available tools, such as the Center for Internet Security (CIS) scoring toolset, can run tests against systems to find out if your hardware meets best-practice standards such as those set by CIS. The software tools take minutes to run, and test such things as whether ports are left unnecessarily open, machines are indiscriminately shared, default permissions are left on, and other basic but often overlooked security lapses. The scoring system is usually simple, and given how quickly the assessments run, CISOs can in short order get a good picture of how "hardened" their hardware is by business unit, by location or by any other variable they please.

Expressed as: Usually a score from 0 to 10, with 10 being the best. Best-in-class, hardened workstations score a 9 or a 10, according to Jaquith. He says this metric is far more rigorous than standard questionnaires that ask if you're using antivirus software or not. "I ran the benchmark against the default build of a machine with Windows XP Service Pack 2, a personal firewall and antivirus protection, and it scored a zero!" Jaquith notes.

information security metrics

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