by Josef Weiss
January 30, 2024
On November 3rd, 2021, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) issued Binding Operational Directive (BOD) 22-01, Reducing the Significant Risk of Known Exploited Vulnerabilities, requiring federal agencies to identify and remediate a CISA managed catalog of known exploited vulnerabilities on their information systems. The National Cyber Awareness System (NCAS), is a system within CISA that produces advisories, alerts and situation reports, analysis reports, current activity updates, indicator bulletins, and more. Federal civilian agencies are required to identify and remediate these vulnerabilities on their information systems.
Tenable Vulnerability Management enables organizations to quickly summarize and track specific vulnerabilities to ensure proper discovery and mitigation. This report showcases mitigation of these vulnerabilities to ensure a reduced attack surface in the organization.
CISA, the FBI, and NSA recommend that organizations apply the methods listed below for Identity and Access Management, Protective Controls and Architecture, and Vulnerability and Configuration Management:
Require multi-factor authentication for all users, without exception
Require accounts to have strong passwords, and do not allow passwords to be used across multiple accounts or stored on a system to which an adversary may have access
Secure credentials
Set a strong password policy for service accounts
Audit Domain Controllers to log successful Kerberos TGS requests and ensure the events are monitored for anomalous activity
Identify, detect, and investigate abnormal activity that may indicate lateral movement by a threat actor or malware
Enable strong spam filters
Update software, including operating systems, applications, and firmware on IT network assets, in a timely manner. Prioritize patching known exploited vulnerabilities, especially the CVEs identified in this CSA, and then critical and high vulnerabilities that allow for remote code execution or denial-of-service on internet-facing equipment
Use industry recommended antivirus programs
Disable all unnecessary ports and protocols
Ensure OT hardware is in read-only mode
Tenable Vulnerability Management uses active credentialed scanning and/or agent-based scanning to collect information needed to identify known exploitable vulnerabilities. This information enables the risk manager to work with asset owners to establish an ongoing remediation action plan, which demonstrates compliance with this directive.
Risk-based vulnerability management (RBVM) is a process that reduces vulnerabilities across the agency's attack surface by prioritizing remediation actions to the risks CISA identifies. Tenable.io enables the agency to go beyond just discovering vulnerabilities and provides the life cycle steps to establish internal validation and enforcement procedures that demonstrate adherence with this directive.
Security leaders need to SEE everything, PREDICT what matters most and ACT to address cyber risk and effectively align cybersecurity initiatives with business objectives. Tenable.io discovers and analyzes assets continuously to provide an accurate and unified view of an organization’s security posture. The requirements for this report are: Tenable Vulnerability Management (Nessus, NNM).
Chapters
Executive Summary
Contains widgets which display vulnerability status counts for DHS tracked known vulnerabilities derived from the CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) Catalog. Displayed are CVE date ranges, vulnerability severity graphs which present results by known plugin families, top most vulnerable assets, and a forward view for vulnerabilities which have an upcoming remediation date.
All Past Due
While the CISA catalog is an important resource to help security professionals identify vulnerabilities to remediate, there are a vast number of these vulnerabilities to detect and remediate. Attackers do not target vulnerabilities that are easy to detect and fix, they target vulnerabilities that can be most effectively exploited. Effective remediation requires the right combination of tools and processes. This chapter addresses CISA Known Exploitable Vulnerabilities (KEV) that are all past due.
Due in <7 Days
While the CISA catalog is an important resource to help security professionals identify vulnerabilities to remediate, there are a vast number of these vulnerabilities to detect and remediate. Attackers do not target vulnerabilities that are easy to detect and fix, they target vulnerabilities that can be most effectively exploited. Effective remediation requires the right combination of tools and processes. This chapter addresses CISA Known Exploitable Vulnerabilities (KEV) that are due in <7 Days.
Due in 7-14 Days
While the CISA catalog is an important resource to help security professionals identify vulnerabilities to remediate, there are a vast number of these vulnerabilities to detect and remediate. Attackers do not target vulnerabilities that are easy to detect and fix, they target vulnerabilities that can be most effectively exploited. Effective remediation requires the right combination of tools and processes. This chapter addresses CISA Known Exploitable Vulnerabilities (KEV) that are due in 7-14 Days.
Due in 14-30 Days
While the CISA catalog is an important resource to help security professionals identify vulnerabilities to remediate, there are a vast number of these vulnerabilities to detect and remediate. Attackers do not target vulnerabilities that are easy to detect and fix, they target vulnerabilities that can be most effectively exploited. Effective remediation requires the right combination of tools and processes. This chapter addresses CISA Known Exploitable Vulnerabilities (KEV) that are due in 14-30 Days.
Due in 4-8 Weeks
While the CISA catalog is an important resource to help security professionals identify vulnerabilities to remediate, there are a vast number of these vulnerabilities to detect and remediate. Attackers do not target vulnerabilities that are easy to detect and fix, they target vulnerabilities that can be most effectively exploited. Effective remediation requires the right combination of tools and processes. This chapter addresses CISA Known Exploitable Vulnerabilities (KEV) that are due in 4-8 Weeks.
Due in 8-12 Weeks
While the CISA catalog is an important resource to help security professionals identify vulnerabilities to remediate, there are a vast number of these vulnerabilities to detect and remediate. Attackers do not target vulnerabilities that are easy to detect and fix, they target vulnerabilities that can be most effectively exploited. Effective remediation requires the right combination of tools and processes. This chapter addresses CISA Known Exploitable Vulnerabilities (KEV) that are due in 8-12 Weeks.
Due in >12 Weeks
While the CISA catalog is an important resource to help security professionals identify vulnerabilities to remediate, there are a vast number of these vulnerabilities to detect and remediate. Attackers do not target vulnerabilities that are easy to detect and fix, they target vulnerabilities that can be most effectively exploited. Effective remediation requires the right combination of tools and processes. This chapter addresses CISA Known Exploitable Vulnerabilities (KEV) that are due in >12 Weeks.