: Transition Safely to Best Practice Security Profiles
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Transition Safely to Best Practice Security Profiles

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Transition Safely to Best Practice Security Profiles

Apply Security profiles to allow rules to protect against malicious traffic without risking application availability.
Security profiles enable you to inspect network traffic for threats such as vulnerability exploits, malware, command-and-control (C2) communication, and unknown threats, and prevent them from compromising your network using various types of threat signatures, machine learning, and AI (some protections require a subscription).
The end goal is to reach a best practice state for all of your Security profiles. However, to ensure the availability of business-critical applications, it might not be feasible to implement a full best practice Security profile configuration from the start. In most cases, you can safely block some signatures, file types, or protocols while alerting on others until you gain the information and confidence to finish a safe transition to best practice Security profiles without affecting availability.
The path to implementing best practice Security profiles is:
  1. Use Strata Cloud Manager to run an on-demand Best Practices Assessment (BPA) report on your security posture or check Strata Cloud Manager's Best Practices Dashboards to assess the state of your current security best practices. Review your best practices adoption, identify gaps in adoption, and review Security profile configuration.
  2. Use the following safe transition steps to move toward the best practice state for your Security profiles.
Ask yourself the following questions to help determine the right approach to enabling Security profiles for a given network segment or set of Security policy rules:
  1. Do I already have Security profiles enabled on rules that protect similar applications or network segments? If the answer is yes, you might be able to duplicate those profile settings, including block actions you already deem safe to enable.
  2. Is the network segment I’m protecting critical for my business? If the answer is yes and you don’t have proven profiles enabled in similar segments, you might prefer to alert first, examine the traffic that causes the alerts to ensure the profile doesn't block critical applications, and then block when you're comfortable.
  3. Am I deploying Security profiles to counter an immediate threat? If the answer is yes, you might want to block as the initial action instead of alerting.
  4. Is there a firewall change process in place that allows investigation and remediation of false positives in a timely manner? If the answer is yes, you might be able to block as the initial action instead of alerting.
    The majority of “false positives” are attempted attacks against a vulnerability that doesn’t exist in your network. The attack is real, but the danger is not because the vulnerability isn’t present, so the attack is often seen as a false positive. Brute-force attack signatures can also cause false positives if you set the attack threshold too low.
Consider your current security posture in combination with the guidance for each type of Security profile to decide how to deploy the profiles initially, and then move to the best practice guidance.

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