Without an alert, security personnel may be unaware of major detection incidents that require immediate action, and this delay may result in the loss or compromise of information.
The ALG generates an alert that notifies designated personnel of the Indicators of Compromise (IOCs) that require real-time alerts. These messages should include a severity-level indicator or code as an indicator of the criticality of the incident. These indicators reflect the occurrence of a compromise or a potential compromise.
Since these incidents require immediate action, these messages are assigned a critical or level 1 priority/severity, depending on the system's priority schema.
CJCSM 6510.01B, "Cyber Incident Handling Program", lists nine Cyber Incident and Reportable Event Categories. DoD has determined that categories identified by CJCSM 6510.01B Major Indicators (category 1, 2, 4, or 7 detection events) will require an alert when an event is detected.
Alerts may be transmitted, for example, telephonically, by electronic mail messages, or by text messaging. The ALG must either send the alert to a management console that is actively monitored by authorized personnel or use a messaging capability to send the alert directly to designated personnel.
The CA API Gateway is configured by default to only allow 5 failed attempts to log on to the Gateway console. After 5 attempts, all accounts will be locked for 20 minutes. Upon the next successful logon as a privileged administrator, such as root on the console, a message will appear stating "there were x failed logon attempts since the last successful login". |