Microsoft Threat Modeling Tool 2016 Tutorial

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The Threat Modeling Tool is a core element of the Microsoft Security Development Lifecycle (SDL). It allows software architects to identify and mitigate potential security issues early, when they are relatively easy and cost-effective to resolve. As a result, it greatly reduces the total cost of development. Azure Sentinel delivers intelligent security analytics and threat intelligence across the enterprise, providing a single solution for alert detection, threat visibility, proactive hunting, and threat response. Azure Security Center is one of many sources of threat information fed into Azure Sentinel to create a view of the entire enterprise.

  1. Microsoft Threat Modeling Tool Training
  2. Microsoft Threat Modeling Tool 2018
  3. Microsoft Threat Modeling Tool Examples
  4. Open Source Threat Modeling Tool
  • Listen to Threat Modeling and the Internet of Things in our SEI Podcast Series. The next meeting of our working group on threat modeling is currently planned for Friday, December 9, 2016. Remote participation is available. Please contact info@sei.cmu.edu for further information. DoD users can find agendas and slides from prior meetings at our.
  • Microsoft SDL Unit04 - Threat Modeling Principles (Level 100) - Duration: 38:45. Blackhawk-Technical-College-IT-Web-Software-Developer 10,770 views.
Microsoft threat modeling tool 2016 tutorials

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Cyber Threat Modeling: An Evaluation of Three Methods

Microsoft Threat Modeling Tool Training

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This post was co-authored by Nancy Mead.

Cyber threat modeling, the creation of an abstraction of a system to identify possible threats, is a required activity for DoD acquisition. Identifying potential threats to a system, cyber or otherwise, is increasingly important in today's environment. The number of information security incidents reported by federal agencies to the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT) has increased by 1,121 percent from 5,503 in fiscal year 2006 to 67,168 in fiscal year 2014, according to a 2015 Government Accountability Office report. Yet, our experience has been that it is often conducted informally with few standards. Consequently, important threat scenarios are often overlooked.

Given the dynamic cyber threat environment in which DoD systems operate, we have embarked on research work aimed at making cyber threat modeling more rigorous, routine, and automated. This blog post evaluates three popular methods of cyber threat modeling and discusses how this evaluation will help develop a model that fuses the best qualities of each.

The State of Cyber Threat Modeling

In addition to being a requirement for DoD acquisition, cyber threat modeling is of great interest to other federal programs, including the Department of Homeland Security and NASA. When cyber threat modeling is applied to systems being developed it can reduce fielded vulnerabilities and costly late rework. However, there are challenges in the existing approaches.

One challenge that we have seen with threat modeling is that it asks engineers to put themselves in a mindset that they aren't often asked to take. In particular, engineers focus largely on building a system and meeting functionality requirements. It is hard, therefore, for them to change hats and envision potential threats.

We coordinate a working group on cyber threat modeling for the DoD. This working group is a forum for organizations doing threat modeling to share their experiences and challenges. Looking across organizations, it is clear there are different types of modeling being used, not always with much in common. For example, it is an open question--and a point of disagreement among different organizations--whether modeling types of attackers and their capabilities can be helpful for identifying what types of threats will be important for a given system. One question, expressed in different ways, frequently debated is:

Tool

What abstraction of the system will give the greatest insight into what the cyber threats are?

An Evaluation of Three Methods

In the first phase of our research, we examined three 'exemplar' approaches--STRIDE, Security Cards, and Persona non Grata--to measure how they worked in practice. These exemplar approaches were selected because they incorporate different modeling strategies that are often discussed. We created an operational concept description for two small systems common in the DoD: a drone system and an IT system for aircraft maintenance data.

We then worked with our university partners--DePaul University, University of Washington, and The University of Utah--who agreed to teach the three threat modeling approaches to over 250 subjects of varying experience and education levels, from the fields of cybersecurity and software engineering. Subjects worked in teams to apply different threat modeling approaches on each of the two systems.

We tracked data to compare the performance of the approaches on the following factors, comparing the results of the 3 methods to one another and to analysis results by experts:

  • number of threat types detected
  • number of threats missed
  • number of false positives reported

Specifically, we tried to identify tradeoffs among the three methods, as well as a degree of confidence that users can expect from each of the three methods. As described in the remainder of this post, no single approach outperformed the others across the board. Rather, we found that the best approach depends on the system and environmental context in which it is used.

STRIDE. STRIDE is an acronym consisting of the following six categories:
-spoofing identity
-tampering with data
-repudiation
-information disclosure
-denial of service
-elevation of privilege

STRIDE was developed at Microsoft and represents the state of the practice (a lightweight variant of STRIDE, for instance, was adopted by the Ford Motor Company). STRIDE involves modeling a system and subsystem and how data flows through the system and subsystem. After that, the methodology relies on a checklist evaluation approach based on the six categories listed above.

Microsoft Threat Modeling Tool 2018

Subjects who used the STRIDE method did not report a lot of false positives, but the teams generally obtained inconsistent results. The threats reported seemed to have more to do with the makeup of specific teams and their background or experience.

Based on our initial analysis, STRIDE seems an ideal approach for teams that don't have a lot of security expertise because the checklist-based approach constrains users and limits the potential for false positives. One weakness of STRIDE, however, is that it is an onerous task to apply checklists of potential threats to the components of the various systems and subsystems.

Security Cards. The Security Cards approach moves away from checklist-based approaches like STRIDE and injects more creativity and brainstorming into cyber threat modeling. The motivation behind this approach is that it can help users identify unusual or more sophisticated attacks. Developed at the University of Washington, the Security Cards method relies on physical resources (i.e., cards) to facilitate brainstorming about potential cyber threats. Subjects were also asked to include reasoning about attacker motivations and abilities.

With Security Cards we found that, overall, the teams of participants exhibited higher effectiveness. Almost all types of threats were found by teams using Security Cards, but the Security Cards approach also exhibited greater variability across teams. This approach, however, produced many false positives. The high number of false positives makes sense because users are encouraged to brainstorm and come up with unusual or atypical scenarios. Similarly, the performance across teams was dissimilar. By applying Security Cards, there weren't many threats that the teams couldn't eventually identify, but each team only found a subset of threats, and that subset varied substantially from team to team.

Given our initial results, Security Cards would seem to be an ideal approach in scenarios where a user values a wider spectrum of results over consistent results.

Persona Non Grata. Developed at DePaul University, the Persona non Grata approach makes threat modeling more tractable by asking users to focus on attackers, their motivations, and abilities. Once this step is completed, users are asked to brainstorm about targets and likely attack mechanisms that the attackers would deploy.

The theory behind this approach is that if engineers can understand what capabilities an attacker may have, and what types of mechanisms they may use to compromise a system, the engineers will gain a better understanding of targets or weaknesses within their own systems and the degree to which they can be compromised.

Some critics of this approach argue that Persona non Grata can often take users down the wrong path. For example, for a system related to national security, users might reason that the system may be the target of a sophisticated attack from another nation state. This conclusion, however, overlooks the fact that a nation state might compromise a system first through a much simpler entry point and then ratchet up operations from there.

With Persona non Grata, our research participants reported fewer false positives, but they also were unable to gain a comprehensive view of potential threats. Their threat modeling tended to consistently produce only a subset of threat types, which we identified as a drawback to this approach.

While the teams using Persona non Grata did not identify all the threats, the threats they did identify were reproduced consistently across teams. This is important if the aim of threat analysis is to identify a potential threat (within that subset) with a [high?] degree of confidence. Moreover, if a threat modeler has more awareness of the types of vulnerabilities that are important in a system, Persona non Grata is ideal because it gives the user a higher degree of confidence in his or her ability to identify priority threats.

Seeking Future Collaborators

Microsoft Threat Modeling Tool Examples

While more than 250 participants across multiple universities participated in our study, we emphasize that this is just one study. We would like to see these results replicated before we make strong claims about any one of these approaches. Likewise, since all the approaches had strengths and weaknesses, an area of future work for us is to develop and validate an approach that combines the best aspects of all three.

For example, imagine the potential of an approach that offers the coverage of Security Cards brainstorming but allows users to achieve the greater consistency in results across teams seen with Persona non Grata. This hybrid approach might be further enhanced by incorporating elements of the more traditional STRIDE approach to achieve completeness.

Open Source Threat Modeling Tool

We are interested in developing this hybrid approach and piloting it with agencies in the federal government. We would train government staff in our hybrid method and then ask them to apply it to an application scenario and develop a threat model. We would then evaluate the threat model results in terms of completeness and consistency.

Interested parties may send an email to info@sei.cmu.edu or leave a comment on this post below.

Additional Resources

Listen to Threat Modeling and the Internet of Things in our SEI Podcast Series.

The next meeting of our working group on threat modeling is currently planned for Friday, December 9, 2016. Remote participation is available. Please contact info@sei.cmu.edu for further information. DoD users can find agendas and slides from prior meetings at our site on milBook (CAC required), https://www.milsuite.mil/book/groups/cyber-modeling-and-simulation-threat-sub-group





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