Archive for the ‘IT risk’ Tag

How to Simplify Your Governance, Risk Management and Compliance Process

This week’s eWeek has my article on how to simplify governance, risk management and compliance processes with a new model.

http://www.eweek.com/c/a/IT-Management/How-to-Simplify-Your-Governance-Risk-Management-and-Compliance-Process/

Table of Contents:

  1. How to Simplify Your Governance, Risk Management and Compliance Process
  2. Roadblocks of Traditional Maturity Model
  3. Process-Only Technologies Can’t Scale
  4. A Better Deployment Maturity Model
  5. Benefits of Vertical Maturity Model

Please give it a read. I would love to hear your feedback on the article.

PCI 2.0 encourages risk-based process: Three things you need to know

Your compliance efforts should be risk-based, rather than merely security-focused. Understanding your enterprise’s risk profile and prioritizing compliance and remediation efforts based on risk has been a growing industry trend since Agiliance was founded five years ago, and the evolution of the PCI standard reflects that.

The PCI Security Standards Council recently offered a preview of the PCI DSS 2.0 and PA-DSS 2.0, to be released at the end of October. The new standard includes clarifications, additional guidance, and evolving requirements—but no dramatic new requirements. The most significant change, especially in terms of your compliance budget, is the tilt toward a risk-based process. Responding to stakeholder feedback, section 6.2 will now “allow vulnerabilities to be ranked and prioritized according to risk” as part of an effort to “align with changes in industry best practices.” This is an approach that Agiliance has been encouraging for some time.

Risks That Matter

The new PCI standard will formally recognize an organization’s need to identify the risks that matter most to their business and to focus finite remediation resources on their top priorities. In embracing a risk-based approach, PCI is following industry standards such as ISO 27001.

Enterprise executives have complained that they are spending a ton on compliance and security, but can’t get enough visibility, and are not seeing much benefit from their investment. What they are really saying is that compliance efforts are not focused on the risks that matter to their specific business.

Many merchants have chosen only partial PCI compliance, according to Computerworld blogger Eric Ogren, due to the “prohibitive costs…and people to administer it all.” By allowing companies to assess vulnerabilliities based on risk, an enterprise can now be fully PCI compliant while only paying to remediate the exposures that really matter. Your organization evaluates its risk posture in the context of its risk tolerance, and other unique factors, and pulling this integrated view together can be effectively automated.

Risk and the accountability for risk acceptance are, and should be, owned by the businesses that are creating and managing those risks. Tools can automate effective risk management processes, but the results delivered by these tools will be only as good as the underlying frameworks, processes and data structures. Risk managers should develop enterprise-specific definitions of risk, as well as an organizational structure that eliminates conflicts and overlaps in responsibilities among all risk-related specialists.

PCI Security Standards Council General Manager Bob Russo mentioned that the new rules mean that “you can talk about a vulnerability with a Qualified Security Assessor (QSA) and economize for risk tolerance within your business circumstances to make it more flexible.”

Using an IT risk management tool to assess and categorize your risk profile across the enterprise helps identify those remediation efforts with the biggest impact.

Focus on the Big Picture

When you are prioritizing vulnerabilities, you need to consider the big picture, the whole enterprise.  The top priority in a small department of your organization might not be important relative to the overall situation.

Security products often bring a narrow, tactical perspective that can create data silos and distract from the strategic view. Gartner Research, in response to the PCI 2.0 preview, recommends “Continue to avoid working with assessors or vendors that push their own remediation services or software.”

The rumors (started by security vendors) that the PCI 2.0 standard would mandate specific tools such as Data Leak Prevention applications turned out to be unfounded.  The new standard seems to require a formal process or methodology, not necessary a product, that locates and documents all sensitive data in an enterprise, which has been a practice that IT-GRC products like Agiliance have promoted for years.

Some of the security products can lead to “audit-fatigue” by producing false-positives in thousands or millions. The output of such products needs to be analyzed with a risk-based lens.

Security tools generally produce low-level information, rather than risk-based analysis that is actionable by business users, auditors, or high-level business governance and policy decision makers. As the diagram below illustrates, the Risk Management function supports prioritized remediation, for example, unlike security tools alone.

Risk layer aligns security to business

In contrast with a tactical, security approach, a risk-based assessment of the entire enterprise can take remediation efforts to the next level. By pulling all the issues into a central repository for analysis, the enterprise gains visibility, eliminates silos, and can cut down on manual or repetitive tasks.

All compliance expenditures should be driven by a risk profile. Each item—vulnerabilities, compensating controls, findings, exceptions, or other elements—should be presented in an IT Risk Management tool in a risk context.

When selecting an IT Risk Management tool, make sure that it automates data collection and offers regular synchronization with your assets and patch management tools. Some products start with a one-time import and grow outdated over time. Others require manual effort to link vulnerabilities to your enterprise IT. A tool that receives automated feeds from your environment and automatically correlates the data for analysis, not only reduces manual effort, but also gives you continuous visibility of risk across your enterprise. The new PCI standards encourage you to prioritize risk management based on this holistic view.

PCI DSS 2.0 and PA-DSS 2.0

PCI has been a rapidly changing standard, but in response to feedback received, the standard will begin a new three-year lifecycle from now on.  While this may not be great news for vendors who tout their gadgets for addressing upcoming PCI standards, we see this as good for companies that comply with the standard. However, it puts more responsibility on individual companies to follow a proper process to identify and manage their risks.

Besides emphasizing a risk-based approach and switching to a three-year update cycle, other notable highlights are a new scoping methodology, coverage of virtualization, and a PA-DSS requirement for centralized logging.  The new standard does not seem to require any new security tools.  Although Visa published a separate best practices for Tokenization, even it did not make the cut for this PCI revision. The new PCI standards will be released October 28 and will be effective January 1, 2011. Agiliance will release revised PCI content within days of the standard’s availability.

Specific Recommendations

  1. Use risk-based techniques for prioritizing compliance efforts. Expect some savings in compliance costs in 2011 from this change alone.
  2. Defer unnecessary security products sold as PCI requirements, in favor of an enterprise-wide understanding of your risk exposure and your organization’s prioritized risk.  Invest in IT risk management systems and processes to cut compliance cost.
  3. With the new three-year lifecycle, plan for the next evolution of the PCI standard (v3.0) no sooner than end of 2013.  There may be minor updates with clarification and guidance, but new requirements are not anticipated until PCI 3.0, which would be effective Jan 2014. This would provide stability and significant cost savings.

The PCI standard released at the end of October may not exactly match this month’s preview, but changes this late in the standards process usually amount to fine tuning. I’ll discuss other PCI 2.0 changes in more detail in future articles.

Operationalize Risk Management

Pravin Kothari

The last topic of discussion at the Accenture CISO Roundtable was “Operationalize Risk Management”.  If you recall, we started the session with Bob West of Echelon One discussing the need for CISO to speak about and measure risk.  Then Scott Charbo of Accenture discussed what risks to measure and how to measure them.  Mark Lockareff of Agiliance then discussed how do you operationalize these measurements and how technologies can help.  Here are some of the key discussion points.

When the analyst community coined the term “GRC” a few years back, they positioned the 3 terms in order of theoretical maturity level.  In theory, an organization should figure out how it wants to run its business and operations (Governance), then figure out how to manage risks they face that may prevent it from running its business, then figure out how to assess and report for compliance requirements.  This is a maturity model that is perfectly logical, but very difficult to achieve given real world constraints.  Given most organizations are on-going operations and must “keep the lights on”, compliance became priority number one.  Compliance is relatively the most well understood requirement and the consequence for non-compliance is clear cut. By now most organizations have significant investments in various aspects of compliance, in terms of people, processes, and technologies.  Most big organizations are becoming “compliant” and have matured to a point of wanting to fill out the rest of the GRC functions, namely Risk and Governance .  Risk is the natural next step since it is better understood and more measurable than governance.  So, the real-world maturity model is really “CRG”.  Not the way things should be, but it is the way things are.

The next logical questions is how does an organization that has invested heavily in compliance, make the transition to proactive risk management?  Can an organization leverage its compliance investments for its risk management initiative?  Where are the gaps and what are the next steps?

Organizations that have invested in compliance programs have usually defined set of controls and testing procedures.  Most organizations have also invested in some control technologies, such as vulnerability scanners, data leakage prevention, identity management, segregation of duties, log monitoring, etc.  The good news is that these control points are some of the same ones required to gauge risk for security, operations, disaster recovery and so on.  The fact that controls have already been defined and being tested and enforced is a great start.  The issue is that the testing and reporting on these controls are generally done with manual audit processes, involving lots and lots of spreadsheets and processes that are error -prone.  As risk is inherently real-time, risks do not cease to exist in-between the audit cycles.  So in order to leverage control investments for risk management, an organization needs to be able to make control assessment and reporting near real-time and continuous.  To move from a compliance centric GRC program to a risk centric GRC program, an organization needs to invest in automation for control assessment and reporting as well as new processes for risk management.

New automated and integrated GRC solutions leverage existing control technology investments and elegantly combine automated data from the environment and deployed controls with the information from operational controls, audit processes and mapped risk models.  By such integration, GRC solution can enables continuous risk and compliance management.

The key to success for most IT projects is to roll out incrementally and achieve realistic goals with clearly demonstrable business benefits at each phase. GRC automation projects are no exceptions.  There is no need to boil the ocean or throw the baby out with the bath water.  Build on existing investments and processes – is the key to move up the “CRG” maturity cycle.

This will probably be my last post for the year.  So happy holidays and a very happy new year to my fellow GRC professionals.

Takeaways from the CISO Roundtable

Pravin Kothari

I hope everyone had a restful long weekend.

Two weeks ago while in Washington DC, I also attended a CISO Roundtable event we joint sponsored with Accenture.  The topic was “A Risk Based Approach to Building a GRC and Security Program”.  Distinguished speakers included:

  • Bob West, Founder and CEO of Echelon One and former CISO at Fifth Third Bank
  • Scott Charbo, Vice President at Accenture and former CIO at Department of Homeland Security
  • Mark Lockareff, President and CEO of Agiliance

It was a lively discussion among CISO of various organizations.  Bob led off talking about how risk is the new language the CISO must learn to speak to bridge the traditional communication gap between CISO and the other business CxO.  Scott talked about how to effective measure risk in a large and complex organization.  Scott introduced this intriguing concept of measure “flow”.  Mark talked about how Continuous Assessment can take an organization from today’s compliance centric process to a risk based process in the future.  Many interesting concepts were discussed and I will attempt to summarize some of the more thought provoking points in future blogs.

Some of the clear themes that came out of the discussion:

  • Automation is no longer a nice-to-have: This theme from our Advisory Board was clearly echoed by the CISO Roundtable attendees.  The CISO from a major federal agency commented that compliance burden for CIO and CISO is so heavy and increasing so, that if her department does not invest in GRC automation technology immediately, her organization will be unable to keep up with all the new compliance and risk management requirements that are still emerging.
  • Being compliant is no longer sufficient: The CIO/CISO community has now clearly realized just being compliant is no longer enough.  A paper exercise does the organization no good when it comes to managing risks and threats.  The new mandate is all about continuous risk management.  CISOs are asked to prioritize and concentrate their resources on highly critical assets.  Risk management is a critical discipline in helping to set that priority.
  • New risks are being introduced faster than ever: One of the main challenges these CISO face is to just keep up with the new risks and threats that are being introduced by new technologies and the ever more sophisticated evil minds.  Mobile devices, P2P technologies, social media, more complex software, social engineering, fraud technologies are introducing new risks to the enterprise from every angle.  Protecting sensitive data and privacy across all these channels of exposure is taxing.  Just to understand and inventory what risk exposures are being introduced in a complex organization will require continuous monitoring technology.

It was great to see that the security leadership of attending organizations is very much at the leading edge in terms of understanding what the exposures are and what they must do to address these current and emergent threats.  As always, whether awareness and understanding translates into effective execution is a whole different issue.  If you don’t see the problem then you can’t address the problem.  It’s good to see that at least the problem is well understood and has received high level of priority from the leadership community.

Forrester’s blog on compatibility of IT Risk and ERM

Pravin Kothari

Pravin Kothari

Chris McClean of Forrester posted an interested blog on the compatibility of IT Risk and ERM applications.  He made a great observation that traditional ERM tools don’t do a good job for IT risk.  A true “enterprise-wide” risk management platform needs to handle both types of risks equally well.  This is certainly a very good point for us to drill down here on this blog.  I will pick up this topic right after I’m done with the current series on automation… if Chris doens’t do  it first :)

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