Hill Associates, a Rockville, Maryland based small business specializing in IT infrastructure and cybersecurity services, has highlighted critical areas for Federal Government cybersecurity in 2021. While the COVID pandemic defined 2020 for the Federal Government, Brian Clary, Senior Vice President at Hill Associates, stated “The large-scale hack on Federal Agencies in December provides a reminder that cybersecurity threats remain a significant risk.”
Kim Vance, Cyber Risk Lead at Hill Associates, stressed the importance of reducing cybersecurity risk via an emphasis on improved identification and management of high value assets (HVA). HVAs are data or systems which process high value information or serve a critical function in accomplishing the Agency’s mission.
According to Ms. Vance, “the key to success is to approach the HVA identification and maintenance processes with a risk-based mindset. Agencies should focus on truly understanding their mission, knowing which systems are critical to mission accomplishment, the impact to the organization should a system be disrupted or the data compromised, and how to mitigate and prioritize vulnerabilities inherent in those systems. CIOs and CISOs should maintain good working relationships with agency functional mission owners to ensure technology solutions and counter-measures support mission needs.
Appropriate risk identification and management will enable efficient allocation of resources and controls to HVA systems. Risk cannot be eliminated; but appropriate application of risk methodologies, such as the NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) and Risk Management Framework (RMF) at a minimum, will assist agencies in defining risk tolerance, establishing controls to reduce risk, and improving the organization’s ability to remain resilience and continue mission essential functions in the case of a cyber incident.
Ms. Vance stated, “we are able to help Federal Government organizations mature their HVA programs throughout the entire lifecycle, whether it be in mission risk review, system identification, application of RMF, CSF, and security controls, security architecture review (SAR), support for risk and vulnerability assessments (RVA), or other internal agency conducted assessments.”
A recent cybersecurity incident referred to as “SUNBURST” has demonstrated the heightened threats that exist in cybersecurity and the need to have robust incident response plans in place to counter this risk. In the SUNBURST incident, attackers were able to infiltrate private sector and Government systems through a malicious software update introduced via the Orion application from SolarWinds, a U.S. network-management company.
The SolarWinds’ Orion application build system was compromised, and software updates became surreptitiously weaponized.