V-32244 | High | DBA OS accounts must be granted only those host system privileges necessary for the administration of the DBMS. | This requirement is intended to limit exposure due to operating from within a privileged account or role. The inclusion of role is intended to address those situations where an access control... |
V-32479 | High | The DBMS must obscure feedback of authentication information during the authentication process to protect the information from possible exploitation/use by unauthorized individuals. | To prevent the compromise of authentication information, such as passwords, during the authentication process, the feedback from the information system shall not provide any information that would... |
V-32476 | High | The DBMS, when using PKI-based authentication, must enforce authorized access to the corresponding private key. | The cornerstone of the PKI is the private key used to encrypt or digitally sign information.
If the private key is stolen, this will lead to the compromise of the authentication and... |
V-32472 | High | DBMS default accounts must be assigned custom passwords. | Password maximum lifetime is the maximum period of time, (typically in days) a user's password may be in effect before the user is forced to change it.
Passwords need to be changed at specific... |
V-32568 | High | The DBMS must employ cryptographic mechanisms preventing the unauthorized disclosure of information during transmission unless the transmitted data is otherwise protected by alternative physical measures. | Preventing the disclosure of transmitted information requires that applications take measures to employ some form of cryptographic mechanism in order to protect the information during... |
V-32410 | High | Vendor supported software must be evaluated and patched against newly found vulnerabilities. | Security faults with software applications and operating systems are discovered daily. Vendors are constantly updating and patching their products to address newly discovered security... |
V-32526 | High | The DBMS must recognize only system-generated session identifiers. | This requirement focuses on communications protection at the application session, versus network packet level. The intent of this control is to establish grounds for confidence at each end of a... |
V-32242 | Medium | The DBA role must not be assigned excessive or unauthorized privileges. | This requirement is intended to limit exposure due to operating from within a privileged account or role. The inclusion of role is intended to address those situations where an access control... |
V-32599 | Medium | The DBMS must notify appropriate individuals when accounts are terminated. | When application accounts are terminated, user accessibility is affected. Accounts are utilized for identifying individual application users or for identifying the application processes... |
V-32598 | Medium | The DBMS must notify appropriate individuals when account disabling actions are taken. | When application accounts are disabled, user accessibility is affected. Accounts are utilized for identifying individual application users or for identifying the application processes themselves.... |
V-32595 | Medium | The application uses cryptographic mechanisms to protect the integrity of audit tools. | Protecting the integrity of the tools used for auditing purposes is a critical step to ensuring the integrity of audit data. Audit data includes all information (e.g., audit records, audit... |
V-32594 | Medium | The application must either implement compensating security controls or the organization explicitly accepts the risk of not performing the verification as required. | Application security functional testing involves testing the application for conformance to the applications security function specifications, as well as, for the underlying security model. The... |
V-32597 | Medium | The DBMS must notify appropriate individuals when accounts are modified. | Once an attacker establishes initial access to a system, they often attempt to create a persistent method of re-establishing access. One way to accomplish this is for the attacker to modify an... |
V-32505 | Medium | Software and/or firmware used for collaborative computing devices must prohibit remote activation excluding the organization defined exceptions where remote activation is to be allowed. | Collaborative computing devices include networked white boards, cameras, and microphones. Collaborative software examples include instant messaging and chat clients.
This requirement is... |
V-32591 | Medium | Applications providing notifications regarding suspicious events must include the capability to notify an organization defined list of response personnel who are identified by name and/or by role. | Incident response applications are by their nature designed to monitor, detect, and alarm on defined events occurring on the system or on the network. A large part of their functionality is... |
V-32590 | Medium | Applications providing IDS and prevention capabilities must prevent non-privileged users from circumventing intrusion detection and prevention capabilities. | Any application providing intrusion detection and prevention capabilities must be architected and implemented to prevent non-privileged users from circumventing such protections. This can be... |
V-32593 | Medium | The application must enforce organizational requirements to protect information obtained from intrusion monitoring tools from unauthorized access, modification, and deletion. | Intrusion monitoring applications are by their nature designed to monitor and record network and system traffic and activity. They can accumulate a significant amount of sensitive data, examples... |
V-32592 | Medium | The DBMS must support taking organization defined list of least disruptive actions to terminate suspicious events. | System availability is a key tenet of system security. Organizations need to have the flexibility to be able to define the automated actions taken in response to an identified incident. This... |
V-32223 | Medium | Applications providing information flow control must track problems associated with the binding of security attributes to data. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32222 | Medium | The application must bind security attributes to information to facilitate information flow policy enforcement. | The application enforces approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information within the system and between interconnected systems in accordance with applicable policy. Information flow... |
V-32221 | Medium | Applications must uniquely identify destination domains for information transfer. | The application enforces approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information within the system and between interconnected systems in accordance with applicable policy.
Information... |
V-32220 | Medium | Applications must uniquely authenticate source domains for information transfer. | The information system enforces approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information within the system and between interconnected systems in accordance with applicable policy.... |
V-32226 | Medium | Applications must prevent encrypted data from bypassing content-checking mechanisms. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32225 | Medium | Applications must enforce information flow using dynamic control based on policy that allows or disallows information flow based on changing conditions or operational considerations. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32224 | Medium | Applications must enforce information flow control using protected processing domains (e.g., domain type-enforcement) as a basis for flow control decisions | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32229 | Medium | Applications must use security policy filters as a basis for making information flow control decisions. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32228 | Medium | Applications must enforce information flow control on metadata. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32519 | Medium | The application must perform data origin authentication and data integrity verification on the name/address resolution responses the system receives from authoritative sources when requested by client systems. | A recursive resolving or caching Domain Name System (DNS) server is an example of an information system providing name/address resolution service for local clients.
Authoritative DNS servers are... |
V-32179 | Medium | The DBMS must display security labels in human-readable form on each object output from the system to system output devices. | Security attributes are abstractions representing the basic properties or characteristics of an entity (e.g., subjects and objects) with respect to safeguarding information.
These attributes... |
V-32454 | Medium | Applications managing devices must authenticate devices before establishing remote network connections using bidirectional authentication between devices that are cryptographically based. | It is an additional layer of authentication ensuring only specific pre-authorized devices operated by specific pre-authorized users can access the network.
Device authentication requires unique... |
V-32455 | Medium | Applications managing network connections for devices must authenticate devices before establishing wireless network connections by using bidirectional authentication that is cryptographically based. | Device authentication is a solution enabling an organization to manage devices.
It is an additional layer of authentication ensuring only specific pre-authorized devices operated by specific... |
V-32359 | Medium | The application must provide the capability to compile audit records from multiple components within the system into a system-wide (logical or physical) audit trail that is time-correlated to within organization defined level of tolerance. | Audit generation and audit records can be generated from various components within the information system. The list of audited events is the set of events for which audits are to be generated.... |
V-32450 | Medium | The DBMS must use organization defined replay-resistant authentication mechanisms for network access to privileged accounts. | An authentication process resists replay attacks if it is impractical to achieve a successful authentication by recording and replaying a previous authentication message.
Techniques used to... |
V-32451 | Medium | The DBMS must use organization defined replay-resistant authentication mechanisms for network access to non-privileged accounts. | An authentication process resists replay attacks if it is impractical to achieve a successful authentication by recording and replaying a previous authentication message.
Techniques used to... |
V-32452 | Medium | Applications required to identify devices must uniquely identify and authenticate an organization defined list of specific and/or types of devices before establishing a connection. | Device authentication is a solution enabling an organization to manage both users and devices. It is an additional layer of authentication ensuring only specific pre-authorized devices operated... |
V-32353 | Medium | The application must validate the binding of the reviewers identity to the information at the transfer/release point prior to release/transfer from one security domain to another security domain. | This non-repudiation control enhancement is intended to mitigate the risk that information could be modified between review and transfer/release particularly when transfer is occurring between... |
V-32380 | Medium | The application must reject or delay, as defined by the organization, network traffic generated above configurable traffic volume thresholds. | It is critical when a system is at risk of failing to process audit logs as required; actions are automatically taken to mitigate the failure or risk of failure.
One method used to thwart the... |
V-32351 | Medium | The DBMS must maintain reviewer/releaser identity and credentials within the established chain of custody for all information reviewed or released. | Non-repudiation protects individuals against later claims by an author of not having authored a particular document, a sender of not having transmitted a message, a receiver of not having received... |
V-32245 | Medium | Use of the DBMS software installation account must be restricted to DBMS software installation. | This requirement is intended to limit exposure due to operating from within a privileged account or role. The inclusion of role is intended to address those situations where an access control... |
V-32458 | Medium | Web services applications establishing identities at run-time for previously unknown entities must dynamically manage identifiers, attributes, and associated access authorizations. | Web services are web applications providing a method of communication between two or more different electronic devices. They are normally used by applications to provide each other with data. ... |
V-32356 | Medium | Databases utilizing Discretionary Access Control (DAC) must enforce a policy that limits propagation of access rights. | Discretionary Access Control (DAC) is based on the premise that individual users are "owners" of objects and therefore have discretion over who should be authorized to access the object and in... |
V-32381 | Medium | The DBMS must shutdown immediately in the event of an audit failure, unless an alternative audit capability exists. | It is critical, when a system is at risk of failing, to process audit logs as required, if the system were to continue processing without auditing enabled, actions can be taken on the system that... |
V-32524 | Medium | The DBMS must provide a logout functionality to allow the user to manually terminate the session. | Manually terminating an application session allows users to immediately depart the physical vicinity of the system they are logged into without the risk of subsequent system users reactivating or... |
V-32588 | Medium | Applications providing malware and/or firewall protection must monitor inbound and outbound communications for unauthorized activities or conditions. | Unusual/unauthorized activities or conditions include internal traffic indicating the presence of malicious code within an information system or propagating among system components, the... |
V-32589 | Medium | Applications that detect and alarm on security events such as Intrusion Detection, Firewalls, Anti-Virus, or Malware must provide near real-time alert notification. | When an intrusion detection security event occurs it is imperative the application that has detected the event immediately notify the appropriate support personnel so they can respond accordingly.... |
V-32460 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to enforce minimum password length. | Password complexity, or strength, is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting attempts at guessing and brute-force attacks.
To meet password policy requirements, passwords need... |
V-32582 | Medium | Applications scanning for malicious code must support organizational requirements to configure malicious code protection mechanisms to perform periodic scans of the information system on an organization defined frequency. | Malicious code protection mechanisms include but are not limited to anti-virus and malware detection software. In order to minimize potential negative impact to the organization that can be caused... |
V-32583 | Medium | Applications providing malicious code protection must support organizational requirements to configure malicious code protection mechanisms to perform real-time scans of files from external sources as the files are downloaded, opened, or executed in accordance with organizational security policy. | Malicious code protection mechanisms include but are not limited to anti-virus and malware detection software. In order to minimize potential negative impact to the organization that can be caused... |
V-32581 | Medium | Applications providing malicious code protection must support organizational requirements to update malicious code protection mechanisms (including signature definitions) whenever new releases are available in accordance with organizational configuration. | Malicious code protection mechanisms include, but are not limited to, anti-virus and malware detection software. In order to minimize potential negative impact to the organization caused by... |
V-32586 | Medium | Intrusion detection software must be able to interconnect using standard protocols to create a system wide intrusion detection system. | When utilizing intrusion detection software, monitoring components are usually dispersed throughout the network, such as, when utilizing HIDS and multiple NIDS sensors. In order to leverage the... |
V-32587 | Medium | For those instances where the organization requires encrypted traffic to be visible to information system monitoring tools, the application transmitting the encrypted traffic must make provisions to allow that traffic to be visible to specific system monitoring tools. | There is a recognized need to balance encrypting traffic versus the need to have insight into the traffic from a monitoring perspective.
For some organizations, the need to ensure the... |
V-32584 | Medium | Applications providing malicious code protection must support organizational requirements to be configured to perform organization defined action(s) in response to malicious code detection. | Malicious code protection mechanisms include but are not limited to anti-virus and malware detection software. In order to minimize potential negative impact to the organization that can be caused... |
V-32585 | Medium | Applications providing malicious code protection must support organizational requirements to address the receipt of false positives during malicious code detection, eradication efforts, and the resulting potential impact on the availability of the information system. | In order to minimize potential negative impact to the organization that can be caused by malicious code, it is imperative that malicious code is identified and eradicated. Malicious code includes... |
V-32230 | Medium | Applications providing information flow control must uniquely authenticate destination domains when transferring information. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32231 | Medium | In support of information flow requirements, applications must track problems associated with information transfer. | When an application transfers data, there is the chance an error or problem with the data transfer may occur. Applications need to track failures and any problems encountered when performing data... |
V-32232 | Medium | Administrative privileges must be assigned to database accounts via database roles. | Applications employ the concept of least privilege for specific duties and information systems (including specific functions, ports, protocols, and services). The concept of least privilege is... |
V-32501 | Medium | The DBMS must employ NSA-approved cryptography to protect classified information. | Cryptography is only as strong as the encryption modules/algorithms employed to encrypt the data. Use of weak or un-tested encryption algorithms undermines the purposes of utilizing encryption to... |
V-32234 | Medium | DBMS processes or services must run under custom, dedicated OS accounts. | Separation of duties is a prevalent Information Technology control that is implemented at different layers of the information system, including the operating system and in applications. It serves... |
V-32235 | Medium | The DBMS must restrict grants to sensitive information to authorized user roles. | Applications employ the concept of least privilege for specific duties and information systems (including specific functions, ports, protocols, and services). The concept of least privilege is... |
V-32236 | Medium | A single database connection configuration file must not be used to configure all database clients. | Applications employ the concept of least privilege for specific duties and information systems (including specific functions, ports, protocols, and services). The concept of least privilege is... |
V-32237 | Medium |
The DBMS must be protected from unauthorized access by developers. | Applications employ the concept of least privilege for specific duties and information systems (including specific functions, ports, protocols, and services). The concept of least privilege is... |
V-32238 | Medium | The DBMS must be protected from unauthorized access by developers on shared production/development host systems. | Applications employ the concept of least privilege for specific duties and information systems (including specific functions, ports, protocols, and services). The concept of least privilege is... |
V-32239 | Medium | The DBMS must restrict access to system tables and other configuration information or metadata to DBAs or other authorized users. | Applications employ the concept of least privilege for specific duties and information systems (including specific functions, ports, protocols, and services). The concept of least privilege is... |
V-32508 | Medium | Applications must support organizational requirements to issue public key certificates under an appropriate certificate policy or obtain public key certificates under an appropriate certificate policy from an approved service provider. | For user certificates, each organization attains certificates from an approved, shared service provider, as required by OMB policy.
For federal agencies operating a legacy public key... |
V-32509 | Medium | Applications designed to address malware issues and/or enforce policy pertaining to organizational use of mobile code must implement detection and inspection mechanisms to identify unauthorized mobile code. | Decisions regarding the employment of mobile code within organizational information systems are based on the potential for the code to cause damage to the system if used maliciously.
Mobile code... |
V-32461 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to enforce minimum password length. | Password complexity, or strength, is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting attempts at guessing and brute-force attacks.
To meet password policy requirements, passwords need... |
V-32349 | Medium | The DBMS must validate the binding of the information to the identity of the information producer. | Non-repudiation protects individuals against later claims by an author of not having authored a particular document, a sender of not having transmitted a message, a receiver of not having received... |
V-32463 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to enforce password complexity by the number of upper case characters used. | Password complexity or strength is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting attempts at guessing and brute-force attacks.
Password complexity is one factor of several that... |
V-32462 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to prohibit password reuse for the organization defined number of generations. | Password complexity, or strength, is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting attempts at guessing and brute-force attacks.
To meet password policy requirements, passwords need... |
V-32465 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to enforce password complexity by the number of numeric characters used. | Password complexity or strength is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting attempts at guessing and brute-force attacks.
Password complexity is one factor of several that... |
V-32464 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to enforce password complexity by the number of lower case characters used. | Password complexity or strength is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting attempts at guessing and brute-force attacks.
Password complexity is one factor of several that... |
V-32467 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to enforce the number of characters that get changed when passwords are changed. | Passwords need to be changed at specific policy based intervals.
If the information system or application allows the user to consecutively reuse extensive portions of their password when they... |
V-32466 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to enforce password complexity by the number of special characters used. | Password complexity or strength is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting attempts at guessing and brute-force attacks.
Password complexity is one factor of several that... |
V-32469 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to enforce password encryption for transmission. | Passwords need to be protected at all times and encryption is the standard method for protecting passwords during transmission.
DBMS passwords sent in clear text format across the network are... |
V-32468 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to enforce password encryption for storage. | Applications must enforce password encryption when storing passwords. Passwords need to be protected at all times and encryption is the standard method for protecting passwords. If passwords are... |
V-32346 | Medium | The DBMS must notify users of organization defined security related changes to the users account occurring during the organization defined time period. | Some organizations may define certain security events as events requiring user notification. An organization may define an event, such as a password change to a user's account occurring outside of... |
V-32516 | Medium | The application must provide additional data origin and integrity artifacts along with the authoritative data the system returns in response to name/address resolution queries. | This control enables remote clients to obtain origin authentication and integrity verification assurances for the host/service name to network address resolution information obtained through the... |
V-32511 | Medium | Applications utilizing mobile code must meet policy requirements regarding the acquisition, development, and/or use of mobile code. | Decisions regarding the employment of mobile code within organizational information systems are based on the potential for the code to cause damage to the system if used maliciously.
Mobile code... |
V-32510 | Medium | Applications designed to address malware issues and/or enforce policy pertaining to organizational use of mobile code must take corrective actions, when unauthorized mobile code is identified. | Decisions regarding the employment of mobile code within organizational information systems are based on the potential for the code to cause damage to the system if used maliciously.
Mobile code... |
V-32161 | Medium | Applications must ensure that users can directly initiate session lock mechanisms which prevent further access to the system. | A session lock is a temporary action taken when a user stops work and moves away from the immediate physical vicinity of the information system but does not want to log out because of the... |
V-32483 | Medium | Applications that are designed and intended to address incident response scenarios must provide a configurable capability to automatically disable an information system if any of the organization defined security violations are detected. | When responding to a security incident a capability must exist allowing authorized personnel to disable a particular system if the system exhibits a security violation and the organization... |
V-32513 | Medium | Applications designed to enforce policy pertaining to the use of mobile code must prevent the automatic execution of mobile code in organization defined software applications and require organization defined actions prior to executing the code. | Decisions regarding the employment of mobile code within organizational information systems are based on the potential for the code to cause damage to the system if used maliciously.
Mobile code... |
V-32389 | Medium | The DBMS must provide the capability to automatically process audit records for events of interest based upon selectable event criteria. | Before a security review, information systems and/or applications with an audit reduction capability may remove many audit records known to have little security significance.
This is generally... |
V-32449 | Medium | The DBMS, if using multifactor authentication when accessing non-privileged accounts via the network, must provide one of the factors by a device that is separate from the information system gaining access. | Multifactor authentication is using two or more factors to achieve authentication.
Factors include:
(i) Something a user knows (e.g., password/PIN);
(ii) Something a user has (e.g.,... |
V-32512 | Medium | Applications designed to enforce policy pertaining to organizational use of mobile code must prevent the download and execution of prohibited mobile code. | Decisions regarding the employment of mobile code within organizational information systems are based on the potential for the code to cause damage to the system if used maliciously.
Mobile code... |
V-32424 | Medium | Unused database components, DBMS software, and database objects must be removed. | Information systems are capable of providing a wide variety of functions and services. Some of the functions and services, provided by default, may not be necessary to support essential... |
V-32375 | Medium | The DBMS must include organization defined additional, more detailed information in the audit records for audit events identified by type, location, or subject. | Information system auditing capability is critical for accurate forensic analysis. Audit record content that may be necessary to satisfy the requirement of this control includes: timestamps,... |
V-32374 | Medium | The DBMS must produce audit records containing sufficient information to establish the identity of any user/subject or process associated with the event. | Information system auditing capability is critical for accurate forensic analysis. Audit record content that may be necessary to satisfy the requirement of this control includes: time stamps,... |
V-32377 | Medium | The DBMS itself, or the logging or alerting mechanism the application utilizes, must provide a warning when allocated audit record storage volume reaches an organization defined percentage of maximum audit record storage capacity. | It is critical for the appropriate personnel to be aware if a system is at risk of failing to process audit logs as required. Audit processing failures include: software/hardware errors, failures... |
V-32376 | Medium | The DBMS must provide the ability to write specified audit record content to a centralized audit log repository. | Information system auditing capability is critical for accurate forensic analysis. Audit record content that may be necessary to satisfy the requirement of this control includes but is not... |
V-32209 | Medium | Applications providing information flow control must enforce approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information between interconnected systems in accordance with applicable policy. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32208 | Medium | Applications providing information flow control must enforce approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information within the system in accordance with applicable policy. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system, and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information),... |
V-32373 | Medium | The DBMS must produce audit records containing sufficient information to establish the outcome (success or failure) of the events. | Information system auditing capability is critical for accurate forensic analysis. Audit record content that may be necessary to satisfy the requirement of this control includes, but is not... |
V-32205 | Medium | The DBMS must enforce non-discretionary access control policies over users and resources where the policy rule set for each policy specifies access control information (i.e., position, nationality, age, project, time of day). | Access control policies (e.g., identity-based policies, role-based policies, attribute-based policies) and access enforcement mechanisms (e.g., access control lists, access control matrices,... |
V-32204 | Medium | The DBMS must enforce dual authorization, based on organizational policies and procedures for organization defined privileged commands. | Dual authorization requires two distinct approving authorities to approve the use of an application command prior to it being invoked. This capability is typically reserved for specific... |
V-32207 | Medium | The DBMS must prevent access to organization defined security-relevant information except during secure, non-operable system states. | Security-relevant information is any information within the information system that can potentially impact the operation of security functions in a manner possibly resulting in failure to enforce... |
V-32206 | Medium | The DBMS must enforce Discretionary Access Control (DAC) policy allowing users to specify and control sharing by named individuals, groups of individuals, or by both, limiting propagation of access rights and includes or excludes access to the granularity of a single user. | Access control policies (e.g., identity-based policies, role-based policies, attribute-based policies) and access enforcement mechanisms (e.g., access control lists, access control matrices,... |
V-32201 | Medium | Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) based applications must dynamically manage user privileges and associated access authorizations. | Web services are web applications providing a method of communication between two or more different electronic devices. They are normally used by applications to provide each other with data. ... |
V-32200 | Medium | The DBMS must support the organizational requirements for automatically monitoring, auditing, and alerting on atypical usage of accounts. | Atypical account usage is behavior that is not part of normal usage cycles, for example, user account activity occurring after hours or on weekends.
A comprehensive account management process... |
V-32203 | Medium | The DBMS must enforce approved authorizations for logical access to the system in accordance with applicable policy. | Strong access controls are critical to securing application data. Access control policies (e.g., identity-based policies, role-based policies, attribute-based policies) and access enforcement... |
V-32202 | Medium | The application must employ automated mechanisms enabling authorized users to make information sharing decisions based on access authorizations of sharing partners and access restrictions on information to be shared. | User based collaboration and information sharing applications present challenges regarding classification and dissemination of information generated and shared among the application users. These... |
V-32577 | Medium | The application must prevent non-privileged users from circumventing malicious code protection capabilities. | Malicious code protection software must be protected to prevent a non-privileged user or malicious piece of software from disabling the protection mechanism. A common tactic of malware is to... |
V-32576 | Medium | The application must automatically update malicious code protection mechanisms, including signature definitions. Examples include anti-virus signatures and malware data files employed to identify and/or block malicious software from executing. | Anti-virus and malicious software detection applications utilize signature definitions in order to identify viruses and other malicious software. These signature definitions need to be constantly... |
V-32162 | Medium | The application must have the ability to retain a session lock remaining in effect until the user re-authenticates using established identification and authentication procedures. | A session lock is a temporary action taken when a user stops work and moves away from the immediate physical vicinity of the information system but does not want to log out because of the... |
V-32574 | Medium | Applications serving to determine the state of information system components with regard to flaw remediation (patching) must use automated mechanisms to make that determination. The automation schedule must be determined on an organization defined basis. | Organizations are required to identify information systems containing software affected by recently announced software flaws (and potential vulnerabilities resulting from those flaws) and report... |
V-32573 | Medium | Applications providing patch management capabilities must support the organizational requirements to install software updates automatically. | Security faults with software applications and operating systems are discovered daily. Vendors are constantly updating and patching their products to address newly discovered security... |
V-32572 | Medium | The DBMS must support the requirement to activate an alarm and/or automatically shut down the information system if an application component failure is detected. This can include conducting a graceful application shutdown to avoid losing information. | Predictable failure prevention requires organizational planning to address system failure issues. If components key to maintaining systems security fail to function, the system could continue... |
V-32478 | Medium | The DBMS must ensure that PKI-based authentication maps the authenticated identity to the user account. | The cornerstone of the PKI is the private key used to encrypt or digitally sign information. The key by itself is a cryptographic value that does not contain specific user information.
When... |
V-32426 | Medium | Unused database components which are integrated in the DBMS and cannot be uninstalled must be disabled. | Information systems are capable of providing a wide variety of functions and services. Some of the functions and services, provided by default, may not be necessary to support essential... |
V-32474 | Medium | The DBMS must enforce password maximum lifetime restrictions. | Password maximum lifetime is the maximum period of time, (typically in days) a user's password may be in effect before the user is forced to change it.
Passwords need to be changed at specific... |
V-32475 | Medium | The DBMS, when utilizing PKI-based authentication, must validate certificates by constructing a certification path with status information to an accepted trust anchor. | A trust anchor is an authoritative entity represented via a public key and associated data. It is used in the context of public key infrastructures, X.509 digital certificates, and DNSSEC.
When... |
V-32473 | Medium | DBMS passwords must not be stored in compiled, encoded, or encrypted batch jobs or compiled, encoded, or encrypted application source code. | Password maximum lifetime is the maximum period of time, (typically in days) a user's password may be in effect before the user is forced to change it.
Passwords need to be changed at specific... |
V-32470 | Medium | The DBMS must enforce password minimum lifetime restrictions. | Password minimum lifetime is the minimum period of time, (typically in days) a user's password must be in effect before the user can change it.
Restricting this setting limits the user's... |
V-32518 | Medium | The application must perform data origin authentication and data integrity verification on the name/address resolution responses the system receives from authoritative sources when requested by client systems. | A recursive resolving or caching Domain Name System (DNS) server is an example of an information system providing name/address resolution service for local clients.
Authoritative DNS servers are... |
V-32406 | Medium | The application must support the employment of automated mechanisms supporting the auditing of the enforcement actions. | Any changes to the hardware, software, and/or firmware components of the information system and/or application can potentially have significant effects on the overall security of the system.... |
V-32246 | Medium | DBMS default account names must be changed. | Default accounts are usually accounts that have special privileges required to administer the database. Well-known DBMS account names are targeted most frequently by attackers and are thus more... |
V-32419 | Medium | Configuration management applications must employ automated mechanisms to centrally verify configuration settings. | Configuration settings are the configurable security-related parameters of information technology products that are part of the information system.
Security-related parameters are those... |
V-32378 | Medium | The DBMS must provide a real-time alert when organization defined audit failure events occur. | It is critical for the appropriate personnel to be aware if a system is at risk of failing to process audit logs as required. Audit processing failures include: software/hardware errors, failures... |
V-32418 | Medium | Configuration management applications must employ automated mechanisms to centrally apply configuration settings. | Configuration settings are the configurable security-related parameters of information technology products that are part of the information system.
Security-related parameters are those... |
V-32481 | Medium | The DBMS must uniquely identify and authenticate non-organizational users (or processes acting on behalf of non-organizational users). | Non-organizational users include all information system users other than organizational users which include organizational employees or individuals the organization deems to have equivalent status... |
V-32480 | Medium | The DBMS must use NIST validated FIPS 140-2 compliant cryptography for authentication mechanisms. | Encryption is only as good as the encryption modules utilized. Unapproved cryptographic module algorithms cannot be verified, and cannot be relied upon to provide confidentiality or integrity and... |
V-32487 | Medium | The DBMS must employ strong identification and authentication techniques when establishing non-local maintenance and diagnostic sessions. | Non-local maintenance and diagnostic activities are those activities conducted by individuals communicating through a network, either an external network (e.g., the Internet) or an internal... |
V-32486 | Medium | The DBMS must employ cryptographic mechanisms to protect the integrity and confidentiality of non-local maintenance and diagnostic communications. | Non-local maintenance and diagnostic activities are those activities conducted by individuals communicating through a network, either an external network (e.g., the Internet) or an internal... |
V-32485 | Medium | The DBMS, when used for non-local maintenance sessions, must protect those sessions through the use of a strong authenticator tightly bound to the user. | Non-local maintenance and diagnostic activities are those activities conducted by individuals communicating through a network, either an external network (e.g., the Internet) or an internal... |
V-32484 | Medium | Applications related to incident tracking must support organizational requirements to employ automated mechanisms to assist in the tracking of security incidents. | Incident tracking is a method of monitoring networks and systems for activity indicative of viral infection or system attack.
Monitoring for this type of activity provides the organization with... |
V-32489 | Medium | Databases employed to write data to portable digital media must use cryptographic mechanisms to protect and restrict access to information on portable digital media. | When data is written to portable digital media, such as thumb drives, floppy diskettes, compact disks, magnetic tape, etc., there is risk of data loss.
An organizational assessment of risk... |
V-32488 | Medium | The DBMS must terminate all sessions and network connections when non-local maintenance is completed. | Non-local maintenance and diagnostic activities are those activities conducted by individuals communicating through a network, either an external network (e.g., the Internet) or an internal... |
V-32456 | Medium | Applications managing network connectivity must have the capability to authenticate devices before establishing network connections by using bidirectional authentication that is cryptographically based. | Device authentication is a solution enabling an organization to manage both users and devices.
It is an additional layer of authentication ensuring only specific pre-authorized devices operated... |
V-32255 | Medium | The DBMS must have its auditing configured to reduce the likelihood of storage capacity being exceeded. | Applications need to be cognizant of potential audit log storage capacity issues. During the installation and/or configuration process, applications should detect and determine if adequate storage... |
V-32362 | Medium | The DBMS must provide audit record generation capability for organization defined auditable events within the database. | Audit records can be generated from various components within the information system. (e.g., network interface, hard disk, modem, etc.). From an application perspective, certain specific... |
V-32363 | Medium | The DBMS must allow designated organizational personnel to select which auditable events are to be audited by the database. | The list of audited events is the set of events for which audits are to be generated. This set of events is typically a subset of the list of all events for which the system is capable of... |
V-32218 | Medium | Applications must provide the ability to enforce security policies regarding information on interconnected systems. | The application enforces approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information within the system and between interconnected systems in accordance with applicable policy.
Information... |
V-32219 | Medium | Applications must uniquely identify source domains for information transfer. | The application enforces approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information within the system and between interconnected systems in accordance with applicable policy.
Information... |
V-32366 | Medium | The DBMS must provide the capability to capture, record, and log all content related to a user session. | While a great deal of effort is made to secure applications to prevent unauthorized access, in certain instances there can be valid requirements to capture, record, and log all content related to... |
V-32367 | Medium | The DBMS must provide the capability to remotely view all content related to an established user session in real time. | While a great deal of effort is made to secure applications to prevent unauthorized access, in certain instances there can be valid requirements to listen/hear or view all content related to a... |
V-32364 | Medium | The DBMS must generate audit records for the DoD selected list of auditable events. | Audit records can be generated from various components within the information system, such as network interfaces, hard disks, modems, etc. From an application perspective, certain specific... |
V-32365 | Medium | The DBMS must initiate session auditing upon startup of the database. | Session auditing activities are developed, integrated, and used in consultation with legal counsel in accordance with applicable federal laws, Executive Orders, directives, policies, or... |
V-32212 | Medium | Applications providing information flow controls must provide the capability for privileged administrators to configure security policy filters to support different organizational security policies. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32213 | Medium | Applications providing flow control must identify data type, specification and usage when transferring information between different security domains so that policy restrictions may be applied. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32210 | Medium | Applications providing information flow control must use explicit security attributes on information, source, and destination objects as a basis for flow control decisions. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32211 | Medium | Applications providing information flow control must provide the capability for privileged administrators to enable/disable security policy filters. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32216 | Medium | Applications designed to control information flow must provide the ability to detect unsanctioned information being transmitted across security domains. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32217 | Medium | Applications must provide the ability to prohibit the transfer of unsanctioned information in accordance with security policy. | The application enforces approved authorizations for controlling the flow of information within the system and between interconnected systems in accordance with applicable policy.
Information... |
V-32214 | Medium | Applications, when transferring information between different security domains, must decompose information into policy-relevant subcomponents for submission to policy enforcement mechanisms. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32215 | Medium | Applications, when transferring information between different security domains, must implement or incorporate policy filters that constrain data object and structure attributes according to organizational security policy requirements. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32564 | Medium | Applications that serve to protect organizations and individuals from SPAM messages must incorporate update mechanisms updating protection mechanisms and signature updates when new application releases are available in accordance with organizational configuration management policy and procedures. | Senders of SPAM messages are continually modifying their tactics and source email addresses in order to elude protection mechanisms. To stay up-to-date with the changing threat and to identify... |
V-32565 | Medium | Applications that are utilized to address the issue of SPAM and provide protection from SPAM must automatically update any and all SPAM protection measures including signature definitions. | Originators of SPAM emails are constantly changing their source email addresses in order to defeat SPAM countermeasures; therefore, SPAM software must be constantly updated to address the changing... |
V-32409 | Medium | The DBMS must support the enforcement of a two-person rule for changes to organization defined application components and system-level information. | Regarding access restrictions for changes made to organization defined information system components and system level information, any changes to the hardware, software, and/or firmware components... |
V-32567 | Medium | Applications must provide automated support for the management of distributed security testing. | The need to verify security functionality applies to all security functions.
For those security functions that are not able to execute automated self-tests the organization either implements... |
V-32560 | Medium | Any software application designed to function as a firewall must be capable employing a default deny all configuration. | A firewall default deny is a firewall configuration setting that will force the administrator to explicitly allow network or application traffic rather than allowing all traffic by default. The... |
V-32561 | Medium | Applications providing remote connectivity must prevent remote devices that have established a non-remote connection with the system from communicating outside of the communications path with resources in external networks. | This control enhancement is implemented within the remote device (e.g., notebook/laptop computer) via configuration settings that are not configurable by the user of that device. An example of a... |
V-32562 | Medium | Proxy applications must support logging individual Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) sessions and blocking specific Uniform Resource Locators (URLs), domain names, and Internet Protocol (IP) addresses. | External networks are networks outside the control of the organization. Proxy servers support logging individual Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) sessions and blocking specific Uniform Resource... |
V-32563 | Medium | Applications performing extrusion detection must be capable of denying network traffic and auditing internal users (or malicious code) posing a threat to external information systems. | Detecting internal actions that may pose a security threat to external information systems is sometimes termed extrusion detection. Extrusion detection at the information system boundary includes... |
V-32403 | Medium | The DBMS must protect the audit records generated, as a result of remote access to privileged accounts, and the execution of privileged functions. | Protection of audit records and audit data is of critical importance. Care must be taken to ensure privileged users cannot circumvent audit protections put in place.
Auditing might not be... |
V-32402 | Medium | The DBMS must protect audit data records and integrity by using cryptographic mechanisms. | Protection of audit records and audit data is of critical importance. Cryptographic mechanisms are the industry established standard used to protect the integrity of audit data. An example of a... |
V-32401 | Medium | The DBMS must support the requirement to back up audit data and records onto a different system or media than the system being audited on an organization defined frequency. | Protection of log data includes assuring log data is not accidentally lost or deleted. Backing up audit records to a different system or onto separate media than the system being audited on an... |
V-32400 | Medium | The DBMS must have the capability to produce audit records on hardware-enforced, write-once media. | Applications are typically designed to incorporate their audit logs into the auditing sub-system hosted by the operating system. However, in some instances application developers may decide to... |
V-32407 | Medium | Applications must prevent the installation of organization defined critical software programs not signed with a certificate that has been recognized and approved by the organization. | Any changes to the hardware, software, and/or firmware components of the information system and/or application can potentially have significant effects on the overall security of the system.... |
V-32360 | Medium | A DBMS utilizing Discretionary Access Control (DAC) must enforce a policy that includes or excludes access to the granularity of a single user. | DAC is based on the notion that individual users are "owners" of objects and therefore have discretion over who should be authorized to access the object and in which mode (e.g., read or write).... |
V-32405 | Medium | The DBMS must support the organizational requirement to employ automated mechanisms for enforcing access restrictions. | When dealing with access restrictions pertaining to change control, it should be noted, any changes to the hardware, software, and/or firmware components of the information system and/or... |
V-32404 | Medium | The DBMS must support enforcement of logical access restrictions associated with changes to the DBMS configuration and to the database itself. | When dealing with access restrictions pertaining to change control, it should be noted any changes to the hardware, software, and/or firmware components of the information system and/or... |
V-32191 | Medium | Applications must not enable information system functionality providing the capability for automatic execution of code on mobile devices without user direction. | Mobile devices include portable storage media (e.g., USB memory sticks, external hard disk drives) and portable computing and communications devices with information storage capability (e.g.,... |
V-32190 | Medium | The application must monitor for unauthorized connections of mobile devices to organizational information systems. | Mobile devices include portable storage media (e.g., USB memory sticks, external hard disk drives) and portable computing and communications devices with information storage capability (e.g.,... |
V-32193 | Medium | The DBMS must provide a mechanism to automatically identify accounts designated as temporary or emergency accounts. | Temporary application accounts could ostensibly be used in the event of a vendor support visit where a support representative requires a temporary unique account in order to perform diagnostic... |
V-32192 | Medium | The DBMS must provide automated mechanisms for supporting user account management. | A comprehensive application account management process that includes automation helps to ensure accounts designated as requiring attention are consistently and promptly addressed. Examples... |
V-32195 | Medium | The DBMS must be capable of automatically disabling accounts after a 35 day period of account inactivity. | Users are often the first line of defense within an application. Active users take notice of system and data conditions and are usually the first to notify systems administrators when they notice... |
V-32194 | Medium | The DBMS must provide a mechanism to automatically terminate accounts designated as temporary or emergency accounts after an organization defined time period. | Temporary application accounts could ostensibly be used in the event of a vendor support visit where a support representative requires a temporary unique account in order to perform diagnostic... |
V-32197 | Medium | The DBMS must support the requirement to automatically audit account modification. | Once an attacker establishes initial access to a system, they often attempt to create a persistent method of re-establishing access. One way to accomplish this is for the attacker to simply modify... |
V-32196 | Medium | The DBMS must support the requirement to automatically audit account creation. | Once an attacker establishes initial access to a system, they often attempt to create a persistent method of re-establishing access. One way to accomplish this is for the attacker to simply create... |
V-32199 | Medium | The DBMS must automatically audit account termination. | When application accounts are terminated, user accessibility is affected. Accounts are utilized for identifying individual application users or for identifying the application processes... |
V-32198 | Medium | The DBMS must automatically audit account disabling actions. | When application accounts are disabled, user accessibility is affected. Accounts are utilized for identifying individual application users or for identifying the application processes themselves.... |
V-32445 | Medium | The DBMS must use multifactor authentication for local access to privileged accounts. | Multifactor authentication is defined as using two or more factors to achieve authentication.
Factors include:
(i) Something a user knows (e.g., password/PIN);
(ii) Something a user has (e.g.,... |
V-32253 | Medium | The DBMS must retain the notification message or banner on the screen until users take explicit actions to log on to the database. | To establish acceptance of system usage policy, a click-through banner at application logon is required. The banner shall prevent further activity on the application unless and until the user... |
V-32490 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to encrypt information stored in the database. | When data is written to digital media, such as hard drives, mobile computers, external/removable hard drives, personal digital assistants, flash/thumb drives, etc., there is risk of data loss... |
V-32491 | Medium | Application software used to detect the presence of unauthorized software must employ automated detection mechanisms and notify designated organizational officials in accordance with the organization defined frequency. | Scanning software is purpose built to check for vulnerabilities in the information system and hosted applications and is also used to enumerate platforms, software flaws, and improper... |
V-32492 | Medium | The DBMS must terminate the network connection associated with a communications session at the end of the session or after an organization defined time period of inactivity. | Non-local maintenance and diagnostic activities are those activities conducted by individuals communicating through a network, either an external network (e.g., the Internet) or an internal... |
V-32493 | Medium | The application must establish a trusted communications path between the user and organization defined security functions within the information system. | The application user interface must provide an unspoofable and faithful communication channel between the user and any entity trusted to manipulate authorities on the user's behalf.
A trusted... |
V-32494 | Medium | Applications involved in the production, control, and distribution of symmetric cryptographic keys must use NIST-approved or NSA-approved key management technology and processes. | Cryptographic key management and establishment can be performed using manual procedures or automated mechanisms with supporting manual procedures.
In addition to being required for the effective... |
V-32495 | Medium | Applications involved in the production, control, and distribution of symmetric and asymmetric cryptographic keys must use NIST-approved or NSA-approved key management technology and processes. | Cryptographic key management and establishment can be performed using manual procedures or automated mechanisms with supporting manual procedures.
In addition to being required for the effective... |
V-32496 | Medium | Applications involved in the production, control, and distribution of asymmetric cryptographic keys must use must use approved PKI Class 3 certificates or prepositioned keying material. | In addition to being required for the effective operation of a cryptographic mechanism, effective cryptographic key management provides protections to maintain the availability of the information... |
V-32497 | Medium | Applications involved in the production, control, and distribution of asymmetric cryptographic keys must use approved PKI Class 3 or class 4 certificates and hardware tokens that protect the users private key. | Cryptographic key management and establishment can be performed using manual procedures or automated mechanisms with supporting manual procedures.
In addition to being required for the effective... |
V-32498 | Medium | The DBMS must implement required cryptographic protections using cryptographic modules complying with applicable federal laws, Executive Orders, directives, policies, regulations, standards, and guidance. | Cryptography is only as strong as the encryption modules/algorithms employed to encrypt the data.
Use of weak or untested encryption algorithms undermines the purposes of utilizing encryption to... |
V-32499 | Medium | Database data files containing sensitive information must be encrypted. | Cryptography is only as strong as the encryption modules/algorithms employed to encrypt the data.
Use of weak or untested encryption algorithms undermines the purposes of utilizing encryption to... |
V-32459 | Medium | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to disable user accounts after an organization defined time period of inactivity. | Password complexity, or strength, is a measure of the effectiveness of a password in resisting attempts at guessing and brute-force attacks.
To meet password policy requirements, passwords need... |
V-32361 | Medium | The application must produce a system-wide (logical or physical) audit trail composed of audit records in a standardized format. | Audits records can be generated from various components within the information system. The list of audited events is the set of events for which audits are to be generated. This set of events is... |
V-32399 | Medium | The DBMS must protect audit tools from unauthorized deletion. | Protecting audit data also includes identifying and protecting the tools used to view and manipulate log data.
Depending upon the log format and application, system and application log tools may... |
V-32398 | Medium | The DBMS must protect audit tools from unauthorized modification. | Protecting audit data also includes identifying and protecting the tools used to view and manipulate log data.
Depending upon the log format and application, system and application log tools may... |
V-32397 | Medium | The DBMS must protect audit tools from unauthorized access. | Protecting audit data also includes identifying and protecting the tools used to view and manipulate log data.
Depending upon the log format and application, system and application log tools may... |
V-32395 | Medium | The DBMS must protect audit information from unauthorized deletion. | If audit data were to become compromised then competent forensic analysis and discovery of the true source of potentially malicious system activity is impossible to achieve.
To ensure the... |
V-32394 | Medium | The DBMS must protect audit information from unauthorized modification. | If audit data were to become compromised then competent forensic analysis and discovery of the true source of potentially malicious system activity is impossible to achieve.
To ensure the... |
V-32393 | Medium | The DBMS must protect audit information from any type of unauthorized access. | If audit data were to become compromised then competent forensic analysis and discovery of the true source of potentially malicious system activity is difficult if not impossible to achieve. In... |
V-32392 | Medium | The DBMS must synchronize with internal operating system clocks which in turn, are synchronized on an organization defined frequency with an organization defined authoritative time source. | Determining the correct time a particular application event occurred on a system is critical when conducting forensic analysis and investigating system events.
Synchronization of system clocks... |
V-32391 | Medium | The DBMS must use system clocks to generate timestamps for audit records. | Determining the correct time a particular event occurred on a system is critical when conducting forensic analysis and investigating system events.
Timestamps generated by the information system... |
V-32390 | Medium | Attempts to bypass access controls must be audited. | Information system auditing capability is critical for accurate forensic analysis. Audit record content that may be necessary to satisfy the requirement of this control includes: time stamps,... |
V-32553 | Medium | Applications functioning in the capacity of a firewall must check incoming communications to ensure the communications are coming from an authorized source and routed to an authorized destination. | In regards to boundary controls such as routers and firewalls, examples of restricting and prohibiting communications are: restricting external web traffic only to organizational web servers... |
V-32369 | Medium | The DBMS must produce audit records containing sufficient information to establish when (date and time) the events occurred. | Information system auditing capability is critical for accurate forensic analysis. Audit record content that may be necessary to satisfy the requirement of this control includes: time stamps,... |
V-32555 | Medium | The DBMS must check the validity of data inputs. | Invalid user input occurs when a user inserts data or characters into an applications data entry fields and the application is unprepared to process that data. This results in unanticipated... |
V-32554 | Medium | The application must be capable of implementing host-based boundary protection mechanisms for servers, workstations, and mobile devices. | A host-based boundary protection mechanism is a host-based firewall. Host-based boundary protection mechanisms are employed on mobile devices, such as notebook/laptop computers, and other types of... |
V-32557 | Medium | Applications designed to enforce protocol formats must employ automated mechanisms to enforce strict adherence to protocol format. | Automated mechanisms used to enforce protocol formats include deep packet inspection firewalls and XML gateways. These devices verify adherence to the protocol specification (e.g., IEEE) at the... |
V-32556 | Medium | Boundary protection applications must prevent discovery of specific system components (or devices) composing a managed interface. | Firewall control requirement for isolating and preventing the discovery of management interfaces. This control enhancement is intended to protect the network addresses of information system... |
V-32559 | Medium | Boundary protection applications must be capable of preventing public access into the organizations internal networks except as appropriately mediated by managed interfaces. | Access into an organization's internal network and to key internal boundaries must be tightly controlled and managed. Applications monitoring and/or controlling communications at the external... |
V-32558 | Medium | Boundary protection applications must fail securely in the event of an operational failure. | Fail secure is a condition achieved by the application of a set of information system mechanisms to ensure that in the event of an operational failure of a boundary protection device at a managed... |
V-32412 | Medium | Database objects must be owned by accounts authorized for ownership. | Database functions and procedures can be coded using definers rights. This allows anyone who utilizes the object to perform the actions the object allows as if they were the owner. This can lead... |
V-32413 | Medium | Database software directories, including DBMS configuration files, must be stored in dedicated directories, or DASD pools, separate from the host OS and other applications. | When dealing with change control issues, it should be noted any changes to the hardware, software, and/or firmware components of the information system and/or application can potentially have... |
V-32414 | Medium | The DBMS software installation account must be restricted to authorized users. | When dealing with change control issues, it should be noted any changes to the hardware, software, and/or firmware components of the information system and/or application can potentially have... |
V-32415 | Medium | Database software, applications and configuration files must be monitored to discover unauthorized changes. | When dealing with change control issues, it should be noted any changes to the hardware, software, and/or firmware components of the information system and/or application can potentially have... |
V-32416 | Medium | The DBMS must automatically implement organization defined safeguards and countermeasures if security functions (or mechanisms) are changed inappropriately. | Any changes to the application components of the information system can potentially have significant effects on the overall security of the system.
Accordingly, only qualified and authorized... |
V-32417 | Medium | Configuration management applications must employ automated mechanisms to centrally manage configuration settings. | Configuration settings are the configurable security-related parameters of information technology products that are part of the information system.
Security-related parameters are those... |
V-32188 | Medium | The DBMS must ensure remote sessions that access an organization defined list of security functions and security-relevant information are audited. | Remote access is any access to an organizational information system by a user (or an information system) communicating through an external, non-organization controlled network (e.g., the... |
V-32189 | Medium | The DBMS must support the disabling of network protocols deemed by the organization to be non-secure. | This requirement is related to remote access, but more specifically to the networking protocols allowing systems to communicate. Remote access is any access to an organizational information system... |
V-32186 | Medium | The DBMS must allow all remote access to be routed through managed access control points. | This requirement relates to the use of applications providing remote access services. Remote access is any access to an organizational information system by a user (or an information system)... |
V-32187 | Medium | The application must monitor for unauthorized remote connections to the information system on an organization defined frequency. | Organizations need to monitor for unauthorized remote access connections to information systems in order to determine if break-in attempts or other unauthorized activity is occurring. There are... |
V-32184 | Medium | A DBMS providing remote access capabilities must utilize approved cryptography to protect the integrity of remote access sessions. | Remote access is any access to an organizational information system by a user (or an information system) communicating through an external, non-organization controlled network (e.g., the... |
V-32185 | Medium | The application must employ automated mechanisms to facilitate the monitoring and control of remote access methods. | Remote network access is accomplished by leveraging common communication protocols and establishing a remote connection. These connections will occur over the public Internet.
Remote access is... |
V-32182 | Medium | The DBMS must utilize approved cryptography when passing authentication data for remote access sessions. | Remote access is any access to an organizational information system by a user (or an information system) communicating through an external, non-organization controlled network (e.g., the... |
V-32183 | Medium | A DBMS providing remote access capabilities must utilize organization defined cryptography to protect the confidentiality of data passing over remote access sessions. | Remote access is any access to an organizational information system by a user (or an information system) communicating through an external, non-organization controlled network (e.g., the... |
V-32181 | Medium | The DBMS must display security labels using organization identified human-readable, standard naming conventions. | Security attributes are abstractions representing the basic properties or characteristics of an entity (e.g., subjects and objects) with respect to safeguarding information.
These attributes... |
V-32448 | Medium | The DBMS, if using multifactor authentication when accessing privileged accounts via the network, must provide one of the factors by a device that is separate from the information system gaining access. | Multifactor authentication is defined as using two or more factors to achieve authentication.
Factors include:
(i) Something a user knows (e.g., password/PIN);
(ii) Something a user has (e.g.,... |
V-32447 | Medium | The DBMS must ensure users are authenticated with an individual authenticator prior to using a group authenticator. | To assure individual accountability and prevent unauthorized access, application users (and any processes acting on behalf of users) must be individually identified and authenticated.
A group... |
V-32446 | Medium | The DBMS must use multifactor authentication for local access to non-privileged accounts. | Multifactor authentication is defined as using two or more factors to achieve authentication.
Factors include:
(i) Something a user knows (e.g., password/PIN);
(ii) Something a user has (e.g.,... |
V-32566 | Medium | The DBMS must verify there have not been unauthorized changes to the DBMS software and information. | Organizations are required to employ integrity verification applications on information systems to look for evidence of information tampering, errors, and omissions. The organization is also... |
V-32172 | Medium | The DBMS must maintain the binding of security labels to information with sufficient assurance that the information/attribute association can be used as the basis for automated policy actions. | Security attributes are abstractions representing the basic properties or characteristics of an entity (e.g., subjects and objects) with respect to safeguarding information.
These attributes... |
V-32427 | Medium | Access to external executables must be disabled or restricted. | Information systems are capable of providing a wide variety of functions and services. Some of the functions and services, provided by default, may not be necessary to support essential... |
V-32170 | Medium | The DBMS must provide the capability to specify administrative users and grant them the right to change application security labels pertaining to application data. | Security attributes are abstractions representing the basic properties or characteristics of an entity (e.g., subjects and objects) with respect to safeguarding information.
Security attributes... |
V-32420 | Medium | Configuration management applications must employ automated mechanisms to centrally respond to unauthorized changes to configuration settings. | Configuration settings are the configurable security-related parameters of information technology products that are part of the information system.
Security-related parameters are those... |
V-32423 | Medium | Default demonstration and sample databases, database objects, and applications must be removed. | Information systems are capable of providing a wide variety of functions and services. Some of the functions and services, provided by default, may not be necessary to support essential... |
V-32422 | Medium | The DBMS must enforce requirements for remote connections to the information system. | Applications that provide remote access to information systems must be able to enforce remote access policy requirements or work in conjunction with enterprise tools designed to enforce policy... |
V-32384 | Medium | To support audit review, analysis and reporting the application must integrate audit review, analysis, and reporting processes to support organizational processes for investigation and response to suspicious activities. | Successful incident response and auditing relies on timely, accurate system information and analysis in order to allow the organization to identify and respond to potential incidents in a... |
V-32385 | Medium | Applications must provide the capability to centralize the review and analysis of audit records from multiple components within the system. | Successful incident response and auditing relies on timely, accurate system information and analysis in order to allow the organization to identify and respond to potential incidents in a... |
V-32386 | Medium | The application must prevent the execution of prohibited mobile code. | Decisions regarding the utilization of mobile code within organizational information systems needs to include evaluations which help determine the potential for the code to cause damage to the... |
V-32429 | Medium | To support the requirements and principles of least functionality, the application must support organizational requirements regarding the use of automated mechanisms preventing program execution on the information system in accordance with the organization defined specifications. | Information systems are capable of providing a wide variety of functions and services. Some of the functions and services, provided by default, may not be necessary to support essential... |
V-32428 | Medium | The DBMS must support the organizational requirements to specifically prohibit or restrict the use of unauthorized functions, ports, protocols, and/or services. | Information systems are capable of providing a wide variety of functions and services. Some of the functions and services, provided by default, may not be necessary to support essential... |
V-32382 | Medium | The DBMS must alert designated organizational officials in the event of an audit processing failure. | It is critical for the appropriate personnel to be aware if a system is at risk of failing to process audit logs as required. Audit processing failures include: software/hardware errors, failures... |
V-32383 | Medium | The DBMS must be capable of taking organization defined actions upon audit failure (e.g., overwrite oldest audit records, stop generating audit records, cease processing, notify of audit failure). | It is critical when a system is at risk of failing to process audit logs as required, it detects and takes action to mitigate the failure. Audit processing failures include: software/hardware... |
V-32421 | Medium | Configuration management solutions must track unauthorized, security-relevant configuration changes. | Configuration settings are the configurable security-related parameters of information technology products that are part of the information system.
Security-related parameters are those... |
V-32549 | Medium | The DBMS must protect against or limit the effects of the organization defined types of Denial of Service (DoS) attacks. | A variety of technologies exist to limit, or in some cases, eliminate the effects of DoS attacks. For example, boundary protection devices can filter certain types of packets to protect devices on... |
V-32546 | Medium | Applications must support organization defined requirements to load and execute from hardware-enforced, read-only media. | Use of non-modifiable storage ensures the integrity of the software program from the point of creation of the read-only image. Organizations may require the information system to load specified... |
V-32547 | Medium | The DBMS must prevent unauthorized and unintended information transfer via shared system resources. | The purpose of this control is to prevent information, including encrypted representations of information, produced by the actions of a prior user/role (or the actions of a process acting on... |
V-32544 | Medium | Applications required to be non-modifiable must support organizational requirements to provide components that contain no writeable storage capability. These components must be persistent across restart and/or power on/off. | Organizations may require applications or application components to be non-modifiable or to be stored and executed on non-writeable storage. Use of non-modifiable storage ensures the integrity of... |
V-32545 | Medium | Applications must, for organization defined information system components, load and execute the operating environment from hardware-enforced, read-only media. | Organizations may require the information system to load the operating environment from hardware enforced read-only media. The term operating environment is defined as the code upon which... |
V-32542 | Medium | Applications must meet organizational requirements to implement security functions as a layered structure minimizing interactions between layers of the design and avoiding any dependence by lower layers on the functionality or correctness of higher layers. | The information system isolates security functions from non-security functions by means of an isolation boundary (implemented via partitions and domains) controlling access to and protecting the... |
V-32543 | Medium | The application must protect the integrity of information during the processes of data aggregation, packaging, and transformation in preparation for transmission. | Information can be subjected to unauthorized changes (e.g., malicious and/or unintentional modification) at information aggregation or protocol transformation points. It is therefore imperative... |
V-32540 | Medium | The DBMS must employ automated mechanisms to alert security personnel of inappropriate or unusual activities with security implications. | Applications will typically utilize logging mechanisms for maintaining a historical log of activity that occurs within the application. This information can then be used for diagnostic purposes,... |
V-32169 | Medium | The DBMS must dynamically reconfigure security labels in accordance with an identified security policy as information is created and combined. | Security attributes are abstractions representing the basic properties or characteristics of an entity (e.g., subjects and objects) with respect to safeguarding information.
These attributes... |
V-32532 | Medium | Only a Honey Pot information system and/or application must include components that proactively seek to identify web-based malicious code. Honey Pot systems must be not be shared or used for any other purpose other than described. | A Honey Pot is an organization designated information system and/or application that includes components specifically designed to be the target of malicious attacks for the purpose of detecting,... |
V-32163 | Medium | The DBMS must maintain and support organization defined security labels on stored information. | Security attributes are abstractions representing the basic properties or characteristics of an entity (e.g., subjects and objects) with respect to safeguarding information.
These attributes are... |
V-32500 | Medium | The DBMS must employ NIST validated cryptography to protect unclassified information. | Cryptography is only as strong as the encryption modules/algorithms employed to encrypt the data.
Use of weak or untested encryption algorithms undermines the purposes of utilizing encryption to... |
V-32160 | Medium | The DBMS must not interfere or be impacted by an OS level session lock. | A session time-out lock is a temporary action taken when a user stops work and moves away from the immediate physical vicinity of the information system but does not log out because of the... |
V-32371 | Medium | The DBMS must produce audit records containing sufficient information to establish the sources (origins) of the events. | Information system auditing capability is critical for accurate forensic analysis. Audit record content that may be necessary to satisfy the requirement of this control, includes, but is not... |
V-32442 | Medium | The DBMS must uniquely identify and authenticate organizational users (or processes acting on behalf of organizational users). | To assure accountability and prevent unauthorized access, organizational users shall be identified and authenticated.
Organizational users include organizational employees or individuals the... |
V-32370 | Medium | The DBMS must produce audit records containing sufficient information to establish where the events occurred. | Information system auditing capability is critical for accurate forensic analysis. Audit record content that may be necessary to satisfy the requirement of this control includes: time stamps,... |
V-32523 | Medium | The DBMS must terminate user sessions upon user logout or any other organization or policy defined session termination events, such as idle time limit exceeded. | This requirement focuses on communications protection at the application session, versus network packet level.
Session IDs are tokens generated by web applications to uniquely identify an... |
V-32166 | Medium | The DBMS must maintain the binding of security labels to information with sufficient assurance that the information/attribute association can be used as the basis for automated policy actions. | Security attributes are abstractions representing the basic properties or characteristics of an entity (e.g., subjects and objects) with respect to safeguarding information.
These attributes... |
V-32569 | Medium | The DBMS must identify potentially security-relevant error conditions. | The structure and content of error messages need to be carefully considered by the organization and development team. The extent to which the application is able to identify and handle error... |
V-32432 | Medium | The DBMS must be capable of backing up user-level information per a defined frequency. | Information system backup is a critical step in maintaining data assurance and availability.
User-level information is data generated by information system and/or application users. In order to... |
V-32433 | Medium | Database backup procedures must be defined, documented, and implemented. | Information system backup is a critical step in maintaining data assurance and availability.
User-level information is data generated by information system and/or application users. In order to... |
V-32430 | Medium | Recovery procedures and technical system features must exist to ensure recovery is done in a secure and verifiable manner. | Application recovery and reconstitution constitutes executing an information system contingency plan comprised of activities that restore essential missions and business functions.
Database... |
V-32431 | Medium | The DBMS must have transaction journaling enabled. | Application recovery and reconstitution constitutes executing an information system contingency plan that is comprised of activities that restore essential missions and business functions.... |
V-32436 | Medium | DBMS must conduct backups of system-level information per organization defined frequency that is consistent with recovery time and recovery point objectives. | Information system backup is a critical step in maintaining data assurance and availability.
System-level information includes: system-state information, operating system and application... |
V-32437 | Medium | The DBMS software libraries must be periodically backed up. | Information system backup is a critical step in maintaining data assurance and availability.
System-level information includes: system-state information, operating system and application... |
V-32434 | Medium | Database recovery procedures must be developed, documented, implemented, and periodically tested. | Information system backup is a critical step in maintaining data assurance and availability.
User-level information is data generated by information system and/or application users. In order to... |
V-32435 | Medium | DBMS backup and restoration files must be protected from unauthorized access. | Information system backup is a critical step in maintaining data assurance and availability.
User-level information is data generated by information system and/or application users. In order to... |
V-32471 | Medium | Procedures for establishing temporary passwords that meet DoD password requirements for new accounts must be defined, documented, and implemented. | Password maximum lifetime is the maximum period of time, (typically in days) a user's password may be in effect before the user is forced to change it.
Passwords need to be changed at specific... |
V-32439 | Medium | The application must support and must not impede organizational requirements to conduct backups of information system documentation including security-related documentation per organization defined frequency. | Information system backup is a critical step in maintaining data assurance and availability.
Information system and security related documentation contains information pertaining to system... |
V-32596 | Medium | The DBMS must notify appropriate individuals when accounts are created. | Once an attacker establishes initial access to a system, they often attempt to create a persistent method of re-establishing access. One way to accomplish this is for the attacker to simply create... |
V-32248 | Medium | The DBMS must specify account lockout duration that is greater than or equal to the organization approved minimum. | Anytime an authentication method is exposed, to allow for the utilization of an application, there is a risk that attempts will be made to obtain unauthorized access.
To defeat these attempts,... |
V-32539 | Medium | Applications must meet organizational requirements to implement an information system isolation boundary that minimizes the number of non-security functions included within the boundary containing security functions. | The information system isolates security functions from non-security functions by means of an isolation boundary (implemented via partitions and domains) controlling access to and protecting the... |
V-32538 | Medium | The DBMS must isolate security functions enforcing access and information flow control from both non-security functions and from other security functions. | Application functionality is typically broken down into modules that perform various tasks or roles. Examples of non-privileged application functionality include, but are not limited to,... |
V-32515 | Medium | The DBMS must prevent the presentation of information system management-related functionality at an interface utilized by general (i.e., non-privileged) users. | Information system management functionality includes functions necessary to administer databases, network components, workstations, or servers, and typically requires privileged user access.
The... |
V-32241 | Medium | Non-privileged accounts must be utilized when accessing non-administrative functions. | This requirement is intended to limit exposure due to operating from within a privileged account or role. The inclusion of role is intended to address those situations where an access control... |
V-32379 | Medium | The application must enforce configurable traffic volume thresholds representing auditing capacity for network traffic. | It is critical when a system is at risk of failing to process audit logs as required, actions are automatically taken to mitigate the failure. Audit processing failures include: software/hardware... |
V-32243 | Medium | OS accounts utilized to run external procedures called by the DBMS must have limited privileges. | This requirement is intended to limit exposure due to operating from within a privileged account or role. The inclusion of role is intended to address those situations where an access control... |
V-32530 | Medium | Applications must enforce requirements regarding the connection of mobile devices to organizational information systems. | Applications designed to manage the connection of mobile devices to information systems must be able to enforce organizational connectivity requirements or work in conjunction with enterprise... |
V-32537 | Medium | The DBMS must automatically terminate emergency accounts after an organization defined time period for each type of account. | Emergency application accounts are typically created due to an unforeseen operational event or could ostensibly be used in the event of a vendor support visit where a support representative... |
V-32536 | Medium | The DBMS must isolate security functions from non-security functions by means of separate security domains. | Security functions are defined as "the hardware, software, and/or firmware of the information system responsible for enforcing the system security policy and supporting the isolation of code and... |
V-32535 | Medium | The DBMS must employ cryptographic mechanisms preventing the unauthorized disclosure of information at rest unless the data is otherwise protected by alternative physical measures. | This control is intended to address the confidentiality and integrity of information at rest in non-mobile devices and covers user information and system information. Information at rest refers to... |
V-32534 | Medium | The DBMS must take needed steps to protect data at rest and ensure confidentiality and integrity of application data. | This control is intended to address the confidentiality and integrity of information at rest in non-mobile devices and covers user information and system information. Information at rest refers to... |
V-32579 | Medium | Applications must provide notification of failed automated security tests. | The need to verify security functionality applies to all security functions.
For those security functions not able to execute automated self-tests the organization either implements compensating... |
V-32249 | Medium | The DBMS must have the capability to limit the number of failed login attempts based upon an organization defined number of consecutive invalid attempts occurring within an organization defined time period. | Anytime an authentication method is exposed, to allow for the utilization of an application, there is a risk that attempts will be made to obtain unauthorized access.
To defeat these attempts,... |
V-32514 | Medium | The DBMS must separate user functionality (including user interface services) from database management functionality. | Information system management functionality includes functions necessary to administer databases, network components, workstations, or servers, and typically requires privileged user access.
The... |
V-32507 | Medium | The application must validate the integrity of security attributes exchanged between systems. | When data is exchanged between information systems, the security attributes associated with said data needs to be maintained.
Security attributes are an abstraction representing the basic... |
V-32502 | Medium | The DBMS must employ NIST validated FIPS compliant cryptography to protect unclassified information when such information must be separated from individuals who have the necessary clearances yet lack the necessary access approvals. | Cryptography is only as strong as the encryption modules/algorithms employed to encrypt the data.
Use of weak or untested encryption algorithms undermines the purposes of utilizing encryption to... |
V-32411 | Medium | The OS must limit privileges to change the DBMS software resident within software libraries (including privileged programs). | When dealing with change control issues, it should be noted any changes to the hardware, software, and/or firmware components of the information system and/or application can potentially have... |
V-32164 | Medium | The DBMS must maintain and support organization defined security labels on information in process. | Security attributes are abstractions representing the basic properties or characteristics of an entity (e.g., subjects and objects) with respect to safeguarding information.
These attributes... |
V-32256 | Medium | The DBMS must have allocated audit record storage capacity. | Applications need to be cognizant of potential audit log storage capacity issues. During the installation and/or configuration process, applications should detect and determine if adequate storage... |
V-32257 | Medium | Applications scanning for malicious code must scan all media used for system maintenance prior to use. | There are security-related issues arising from software brought into the information system specifically for diagnostic and repair actions. (e.g., a software packet sniffer installed on a system... |
V-32254 | Medium | The DBMS must display the system use information when appropriate, before granting further access. | For publicly accessible systems:
Applications are required to display the following information:
(i) displays the system use information when appropriate, before granting further access;
(ii)... |
V-32158 | Medium | The application must ensure the screen display is obfuscated when an application session lock event occurs. | A session time-out lock is a temporary action taken when a user stops work and moves away from the immediate physical vicinity of the information system but does not log out because of the... |
V-32250 | Medium | The DBMS must enforce the organization defined time period during which the limit of consecutive failed login attempts by a user is counted. | Anytime an authentication method is exposed to allow for the utilization of an application, there is a risk that attempts will be made to obtain unauthorized access.
To aid in defeating these... |
V-32251 | Medium | The DBMS, when the maximum numbers of unsuccessful attempts is exceeded, must automatically lock the account/node for an organization defined time period or lock the account/node until released by an administrator IAW organizational policy. | Anytime an authentication method is exposed, to allow for the utilization of an application, there is a risk that attempts will be made to obtain unauthorized access.
To defeat these attempts,... |
V-32157 | Medium | The DBMS must limit the number of concurrent sessions for each system account to an organization defined number of sessions. | Application management includes the ability to control the number of users and user sessions utilizing an application. Limiting the number of allowed users, and sessions per user, is helpful in... |
V-32578 | Medium | Malicious code protection applications must update malicious code protection mechanisms only when directed by a privileged user. | Malicious code protection software must be protected to prevent a non-privileged user or malicious piece of software from manipulating the protection update mechanism.
Malicious code includes... |
V-32258 | Medium | Applications utilizing mobile code must meet DoD-defined mobile code requirements. | Decisions regarding the deployment of mobile code within organizational information systems are based on the potential for the code to cause damage to the system if used maliciously.
Mobile code... |
V-32528 | Medium | The DBMS must fail to a known safe state for defined types of failures. | Failure in a known state can address safety or security in accordance with the mission/business needs of the organization.
Failure in a known secure state helps prevent a loss of... |
V-32529 | Medium | The DBMS must preserve any organization defined system state information in the event of a system failure. | Failure in a known state can address safety or security in accordance with the mission/business needs of the organization. Failure in a known secure state helps prevent a loss of confidentiality,... |
V-32517 | Medium | Applications, when operating as part of a distributed, hierarchical namespace, must provide the means to indicate the security status of child subspaces and (if the child supports secure resolution services) enable verification of a chain of trust among parent and child domains. | This control enables remote clients to obtain origin authentication and integrity verification assurances for the host/service name to network address resolution information obtained through the... |
V-32444 | Medium | The DBMS must use multifactor authentication for network access to non-privileged accounts. | Multifactor authentication is defined as using two or more factors to achieve authentication.
Factors include:
(i) Something a user knows (e.g., password/PIN);
(ii) Something a user has (e.g.,... |
V-32443 | Medium | The DBMS must use multifactor authentication for network access to privileged accounts. | Multifactor authentication is defined as using two or more factors to achieve authentication.
Factors include:
(i) Something a user knows (e.g., password/PIN);
(ii) Something a user has (e.g.,... |
V-32571 | Medium | The DBMS must restrict error messages, so only authorized personnel may view them. | If the application provides too much information in error logs and administrative messages to the screen, this could lead to compromise. The structure and content of error messages need to be... |
V-32503 | Medium | Applications must respond to security function anomalies in accordance with organization defined responses and alternative action(s). | The need to verify security functionality applies to all security functions.
For those security functions not able to execute automated self-tests the organization either implements compensating... |
V-32520 | Medium | The application must perform data origin authentication and data integrity verification on all resolution responses received whether or not local client systems explicitly request this service. | A recursive resolving or caching Domain Name System (DNS) server is an example of an information system providing name/address resolution service for local clients.
Authoritative DNS servers are... |
V-32521 | Medium | Applications that collectively provide name/address resolution service for an organization must implement internal/external role separation. | A Domain Name System (DNS) server is an example of an information system providing name/address resolution service. To eliminate single points of failure and to enhance redundancy, there are... |
V-32522 | Medium | The DBMS must ensure authentication of both client and server during the entire session. | This control focuses on communications protection at the session, versus packet level.
At the application layer, session IDs are tokens generated by web applications to uniquely identify an... |
V-32570 | Medium | The DBMS must only generate error messages that provide information necessary for corrective actions without revealing organization defined sensitive or potentially harmful information in error logs and administrative messages that could be exploited. | Any application providing too much information in error logs and in administrative messages to the screen risks compromising the data and security of the application and system. The structure and... |
V-32504 | Medium | The DBMS must protect the integrity of publicly available information and applications. | The purpose of this control is to ensure organizations explicitly address the protection needs for public information and applications with such protection likely being implemented as part of... |
V-32525 | Medium | The DBMS must generate a unique session identifier for each session. | This requirement focuses on communications protection at the application session, versus network packet level. The intent of this control is to establish grounds for confidence at each end of a... |
V-32527 | Medium | The DBMS must generate unique session identifiers with organization defined randomness requirements. | This requirement focuses on communications protection at the application session, versus network packet level. The intent of this control is to establish grounds for confidence at each end of a... |
V-32533 | Medium | Applications must maintain the confidentiality of information during aggregation, packaging, and transformation in preparation for transmission. When transmitting data, applications need to leverage transmission protection mechanisms such as TLS, SSL VPN | Preventing the disclosure of transmitted information requires that applications take measures to employ some form of cryptographic mechanism in order to protect the information during... |
V-32240 | Medium | Administrators must utilize a separate, distinct administrative account when performing administrative activities, accessing database security functions, or accessing security-relevant information. | This requirement is intended to limit exposure due to operating from within a privileged account or role. The inclusion of role is intended to address those situations where an access control... |
V-32368 | Medium | The DBMS must produce audit records containing sufficient information to establish what type of events occurred. | Information system auditing capability is critical for accurate forensic analysis. Audit record content that may be necessary to satisfy the requirement of this control includes: time stamps,... |
V-32506 | Medium | The DBMS must associate and maintain security labels when exchanging information between systems. | When data is exchanged between information systems, the security attributes associated with said data needs to be maintained.
Security attributes are an abstraction representing the basic... |
V-32531 | Medium | The application must disable network access by unauthorized components/devices or notify designated organizational officials. | Maintaining system and network integrity requires all systems on the network are identified and accounted for. Without an accurate accounting of systems utilizing the network, the opportunity... |
V-32176 | Medium | The DBMS must allow authorized users to associate security labels to information in the database. | Security attributes are abstractions representing the basic properties or characteristics of an entity (e.g., subjects and objects) with respect to safeguarding information.
These attributes... |
V-32227 | Low | The DBMS must enforce organization defined limitations on the embedding of data types within other data types. | Information flow control regulates where information is allowed to travel within an information system and between information systems (as opposed to who is allowed to access the information) and... |
V-32348 | Low | The DBMS must associate the identity of the information producer with the information. | Non-repudiation supports audit requirements to provide the appropriate organizational officials the means to identify who produced specific information in the event of an information transfer.... |
V-32345 | Low | The DBMS must notify the user of the number of unsuccessful login attempts occurring during an organization defined time period. | Users need to be aware of activity that occurs regarding their application account. Providing users with information regarding the number of successful attempts made to login to their account... |
V-32347 | Low | The DBMS must protect against an individual using a group account from falsely denying having performed a particular action. | Non-repudiation of actions taken is required in order to maintain application integrity. Examples of particular actions taken by individuals include creating information, sending a message,... |
V-32551 | Low | The DBMS must manage excess capacity, bandwidth, or other redundancy to limit the effects of information flooding types of Denial of Service (DoS) attacks. | In the case of application DoS attacks, care must be taken when designing the application to ensure the application makes the best use of system resources. SQL queries have the potential to... |
V-32550 | Low | The DBMS must restrict the ability of users to launch Denial of Service (DoS) attacks against other information systems or networks. | When it comes to DoS attacks most of the attention is paid to ensuring that systems and applications are not victims of these attacks.
While it is true that those accountable for systems want... |
V-32388 | Low | The DBMS must provide a report generation capability for audit reduction data. | In support of Audit Review, Analysis, and Reporting requirements, audit reduction is a technique used to reduce the volume of audit records in order to facilitate a manual review.
Before a... |
V-32387 | Low | The DBMS must provide an audit log reduction capability. | Audit reduction is used to reduce the volume of audit records in order to facilitate manual review. Before a security review information systems and/or applications with an audit reduction... |
V-32260 | Low | The DBMS must display the number of failed login attempts made with a user account upon successful login of that user account. | Users need to be aware of activity that occurs regarding their application account. Providing users with information regarding the number of unsuccessful attempts made to login to their account... |
V-32548 | Low | The DBMS must not share resources used to interface with systems operating at different security levels. | The purpose of this control is to prevent information, including encrypted representations of information, produced by the actions of a prior user/role (or the actions of a process acting on... |
V-32552 | Low | The DBMS must limit the use of resources by priority and not impede the host from servicing processes designated as a higher-priority. | Priority protection helps prevent a lower-priority process from delaying or interfering with the information system servicing any higher-priority process. This control does not apply to components... |
V-32575 | Low | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to employ automated patch management tools to facilitate flaw remediation to organization defined information system components. | The organization (including any contractor to the organization) shall promptly install security-relevant software updates (e.g., patches, service packs, and hot fixes). Flaws discovered during... |
V-32247 | Low | The DBMS must be able to function within separate processing domains (virtualized systems), when specified, to enable finer-grained allocation of user privileges. | Applications must employ the concept of least privilege, allowing only authorized accesses for users (and processes acting on behalf of users) which are necessary to accomplish assigned tasks in... |
V-32252 | Low | The DBMS must display an approved system use notification message or banner before granting access to the database. | Applications are required to display an approved system use notification message or banner before granting access to the system providing privacy and security notices consistent with applicable... |
V-32259 | Low | The DBMS must, upon successful login, display to the user the date and time of the users last login. | Users need to be aware of activity that occurs regarding their application account. Providing users with information regarding the date and time of their last successful login allows the user to... |
V-32233 | Low | The DBMS must support organizational requirements to implement separation of duties through assigned information access authorizations. | Separation of duties is a prevalent Information Technology control that is implemented at different layers of the information system, including the operating system and in applications. It serves... |