Transcript Document

IT Best Practices for Community Colleges Part 2:
Business Continuity
Donald Hester
March 9, 2010
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IT Best Practices for Community Colleges Part 2:
Business Continuity
Donald Hester
What is IT Contingency Planning
NIST SP 800-34
OMB Circular A-130, Appendix III, requires the
development and maintenance of continuity of support
plans for general support systems and contingency
plans for major applications.
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Business Continuity Planning
 Business continuity planning
• reestablishment of critical business
operations
so that operations can continue
•
 If a disaster has rendered the business
unusable for continued operations, there
must be a plan to allow the business to
continue to function
Continuity Strategy
 Management must drive strategic planning to assure
continuous information systems availability
 Plans are referred to in a number of ways
• Business Continuity Plans (BCPs)
• Disaster Recovery Plans (DRPs)
• Incident Response Plans (IRPs)
• Contingency Plans (CP)
• Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP)
• Business Recovery Plan (BRP)
 Some organizations may have many types of plans,
some may have one simple plan
 Most organizations have inadequate planning
Interrelationship of Emergency
Preparedness Plans
NIST SP 800-34
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Follow the System Development
Life Cycle (SDLC)
NIST SP 800-34
12
Seven-step Continuity Process
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1
• Develop the contingency planning policy statement
2
• Conduct the business impact analysis
3
• Identify preventive controls
4
• Develop recovery strategies
5
• Develop an IT contingency plan
6
• Plan testing, training and exercise
7
• Plan maintenance
Contingency Planning Policy
 “A formal department or agency policy
provides the authority and guidance
necessary to develop an effective
contingency plan.”
• Identify statutory requirements
• Identify organizational requirements
• Management support
• Create policy
• Publish policy (communicate policy)
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Business Impact Analysis
 Begin with Business Impact Analysis (BIA)
if the attack succeeds, what do we do then?
 The CP team conducts the BIA in the following
stages:
1.Threat attack identification
2.Business unit analysis
3.Attack success scenarios
4.Potential damage assessment
5.Subordinate plan classification
 “The BIA helps to identify and prioritize critical
IT systems and components.”
BIA Process
Identify critical IT
resources and
dependencies
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Identify
maximum
allowable
downtime
Develop
recovery
strategies &
priorities
Business Impact Analysis
 3 types of threats
• Natural - e.g., earthquake,
•
•
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hurricane, tornado, flood, and fire
Human - e.g., operator error,
sabotage, implant of malicious
code, and terrorist attacks
Environmental - e.g., equipment
failure, software error,
telecommunications network
outage, and electric power failure.
Identify Preventive Controls
 “Measures taken to reduce the effects of
system disruptions can increase system
availability and reduce contingency life
cycle costs.”
• Redundancy
• Backups
• Environmental: A/C, Fire Suppression
• Offsite Storage
• UPS/Generator
• Earthquake racks
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Develop Recovery Strategies
 “Thorough recovery strategies ensure
that the system may be recovered
quickly and effectively following a
disruption.”
• Onsite Recovery, recover from backup
• Hardware replacement,

Vendor agreements (SLA)
• Alternate site, reciprocal agreements

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Cold site, warm site, hot site, mobile site,
mirrored sites
Develop an IT Contingency Plan
 “The contingency plan should contain
detailed guidance and procedures for
restoring a damaged system.”
• Document roles and responsibilities
• Document recovery information
• Notification and Activation
• Damage Assessment
• Recovery Procedures
• Call Tree
Plan Testing, Training & Exercises
 “Testing the plan identifies planning gaps,
whereas training prepares recovery personnel
for plan activation; both activities improve plan
effectiveness and overall agency
preparedness.”
• Annual testing
Classroom exercises
Functional exercise
Find weakness
Train users so that when it happens you are ready
and know what to do


•
•
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Plan Maintenance
 “The plan should be a living document
that is updated regularly to remain
current with system enhancements.”
• The plan must be maintained in a ready
•
•
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state that accurately reflects system
requirements, procedures, organizational
structure, and policies.
Keep a record of changes
Updated as needed
Why NIST?
“State, local, and tribal governments, as well as private
sector organizations, are encouraged to use the guidelines,
as appropriate." NIST SP 800-100
California Information Security Strategic Plan (OCT 2009)
"...by adopting the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
800-37 guidelines for certification and accreditation of information systems.
Applying NIST guidelines to state government systems will demonstrate
California’s leadership in building a resilient, secure, and trustworthy digital
infrastructure."
"Establish a California modified version of the NIST 800-30 risk
management standard as the risk management standard for all state
agencies."
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"Establish a California-modified version of the NIST 800-53 recommended
security controls within all state agencies."
Resources
 NIST SP 800-34 “Contingency Guide for
Information Technology Systems”
• Has sample documents
 ISO 17799 § 11
 COBIT § DS4.0
 Guide to Disaster Recovery by Michael
Erbschloe ISBN 0-619-13122-5
 DRI International
 Disaster-Resource.com
Q&A
Donald E. Hester
CISSP, CISA, CAP, MCT, MCITP, MCTS, MCSE Security, Security+
Maze & Associates
@One / San Diego City College
www.LearnSecurity.org
http://www.linkedin.com/in/donaldehester
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=245570977486
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IT Best Practices for Community Colleges Part 2:
Business Continuity
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