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“Go Big with Bootcamp for Advanced Memory Forensics and Threat Detection”

 

Sometimes, to tackle tough challenges or overcome particularly obstinate obstacles, you’ve got to go big. No run-of-the-mill efforts or ordinary endeavors will do. It’s time for determined, extraordinary work. It’s time for bootcamp. And that’s exactly what SANS is offering with its relaunch of FOR526 Advanced Memory Forensics and Threat Detection.

Malware is more sophisticated, and its ability to evade detection growing. Cryptojacking — software programs and malware that hijack another’s computer without their knowledge to mine cryptocurrency — is one such example. Recently, researchers discovered a new cryptocurrency mining malware that employs multiple evasion techniques, including one that poses as an installer file for the Windows operating system so it seems less suspicious. And illicit cryptocurrency mining operations have increased dramatically over the past year, according to a recent Cyber Threat Alliance report, rising by as much as 459 percent in 2018.

The more complex, advanced malware and anti-analysis and evasion techniques pose great challenges to today’s security practitioners, as the endpoint detection methods and technologies, we rely upon to protect our enterprise fail. For this reason, we at SANS have decided to go big with a revised FOR526 course — with an additional boot camp — that teaches you how to isolate malicious activity using memory analysis to counter these evasions and allows you to determine the capability and intent of the intrusion for successful scoping and containment.

To move to proactive hunting, teams must have the skills to identify the activity for which there is no signature. The FOR526 course delivers this expertise with an intensive hands-on focus, allowing security practitioners to build on the knowledge advanced security professionals already have.

The two creators of FOR526, Alissa Torres and Jake Williams, understand the unique challenges of memory forensics and the complex types of cases examiners are up against today. Both forensics practitioners themselves, they know examiners need deeper technical expertise beyond just running a tool so they can perform memory analysis to understand the evidence, and that means offering students labs inspired by real-world investigations in which memory forensics saved the day. As Williams notes, “memory offers a very dense and target-rich search space for evidence of value. Memory-only malware? Malicious insiders using private browsing to eliminate disk evidence? Anti-forensics techniques? They all get stuck in memory.”

Williams and Torres have added a boot camp consisting of additional content and memory forensics challenges to make the course even more relevant for present-day memory forensics investigations and threat detection. The NEW FOR526: Advanced Memory Forensics and Threat Detection BootCamp brings you extended mid-week SANS NetWars challenges, more in-depth technical content and advanced threat detection scenarios to take senior incident responder professionals to the next level.

Slider_CTIAt this month’s Cyber Threat Intelligence Summit in Arlington, Virginia, Torres will run FOR526: Advanced Memory Forensics & Threat Detection January 23 — 28. The summit is a week-long conference and educational event with in-depth talks and interactive discussions, as well as community-building events, networking opportunities and hands-on, immersive courses designed to give you world-class training.

Learn more about the course new format and content by attending Alissa Torres webcast January 14th at 1:00 pm EST.

Register for the webcast: http://www.sans.org/u/Mi2

Next FOR526 course runs: http://www.sans.org/u/MhX


*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from SANS Digital Forensics and Incident Response Blog authored by sansdfir. Read the original post at: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SANSForensics/~3/3o2MCEBcZU0/go-big-with-bootcamp-for-advanced-memory-forensics-and-threat-detection