SQLServerCentral Editorial

Regular Audit Analysis

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I was reading over a digital supplement that I received from Dark Reading recently, which details some of the issues in the Epsilon, Gawker Media, and a few other data breaches. It was light on details, but there were some nuggets of knowledge in there about how these attack occurred. Some were sophisticated, and some were insider attacks, but the advice given to help protect your data was all similar: limit access, watch for injection, audit, and monitor.

I know that over the last decade as I've run SQLServerCentral, the topic of security and auditing has grown in importance. More and more people are implementing auditing functions in their applications and slowly tightening security where they can. There is a lot of work to do, and a lot more education that needs to be spread to a wider audience, but the trend is positive.

However one thing in the article caught me eye, and it had me wondering how many people are going beyond the basics. For those of you that have auditing built into your application or database, I have a question this week:

Do you regularly analyze the audit data to look for abnormal trends or access?

All the data in the world doesn't have any value if it's not used. In a security context audit data isn't all that useful if it's only examined when an incident is discovered. The real value in auditing data is the ability to uncover problems before they occur. Looking for inappropriate access, unusual access for a particular individual or application, or even repeated attempts to gain access can help prevent a data breach.

After all, catching the criminal later doesn't necessarily mean you've "recovered" the data. Unlike physical objects, data can easily be copied and spread in way that prevents it's complete recovery.

Steve Jones


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