IAC-15.9: Emergency Accounts
Mechanisms exist to establish and control "emergency access only" accounts.
Control Question: Does the organization establish and control "emergency access only" accounts?
General (2)
| Framework | Mapping Values |
|---|---|
| AICPA TSC 2017:2022 (used for SOC 2) (source) | CC8.1-POF13 |
| SCF CORE Mergers, Acquisitions & Divestitures (MA&D) | IAC-15.9 |
US (2)
| Framework | Mapping Values |
|---|---|
| US HIPAA Administrative Simplification 2013 (source) | 164.312(a)(2)(ii) |
| US HIPAA Security Rule / NIST SP 800-66 R2 (source) | 164.312(a)(2)(ii) |
APAC (2)
| Framework | Mapping Values |
|---|---|
| APAC Australia Essential 8 | ML2-P4 ML3-P4 |
| APAC Australia ISM June 2024 | ISM-1610 ISM-1611 ISM-1612 ISM-1613 ISM-1614 ISM-1615 |
Capability Maturity Model
Level 0 — Not Performed
There is no evidence of a capability to establish and control "emergency access only" accounts.
Level 1 — Performed Informally
C|P-CMM1 is N/A, since a structured process is required to establish and control "emergency access only" accounts.
Level 2 — Planned & Tracked
Identification & Authentication (IAC) efforts are requirements-driven and governed at a local/regional level, but are not consistent across the organization. CMM Level 2 control maturity would reasonably expect all, or at least most, the following criteria to exist: o Implement and maintain an Identity & Access Management (IAM) capability for all users to implement “least privileges” Role Based Access Control (RBAC) practices for the management of user, group and system accounts, including privileged accounts. o Govern IAM technologies via RBAC to prohibit privileged access by non-organizational users, unless there is an explicit support contract for privileged IT support services.
- Logical Access Control (LAC) is decentralized (e.g., a localized/regionalized function) and uses non-standardized methods to implement secure, resilient and compliant practices.
- IT/cybersecurity personnel identify cybersecurity and data protection controls that are appropriate to address applicable statutory, regulatory and contractual requirements for logical access control.
- IT personnel:
- Active Directory (AD), or a similar technology, is primarily used to centrally manage identities and permissions with RBAC. Due to technical or business limitations, asset/process owners are empowered to operate a decentralized access control program for their specific systems, applications and services that cannot be integrated into AD.
- IAM controls are primarily administrative in nature (e.g., policies & standards) to manage accounts and permissions.
- An IAM function, or similar function, provisions and deprovisions incident responders with temporary emergency accounts.
Level 3 — Well Defined
Identification & Authentication (IAC) efforts are standardized across the organization and centrally managed, where technically feasible, to ensure consistency. CMM Level 3 control maturity would reasonably expect all, or at least most, the following criteria to exist:
- An Identity & Access Management (IAM) function, or similar function, centrally manages permissions and implements “least privileges” Role Based Access Control (RBAC) practices for the management of user, group and system accounts, including privileged accounts.
- The Human Resources (HR) department governs personnel management operations and notifies IAM personnel of personnel role changes for RBAC-based provisioning and deprovisioning actions.
- An IT Asset Management (ITAM) function, or similar function, categorizes endpoint devices according to the data the asset stores, transmits and/ or processes and applies the appropriate technology controls to protect the asset and data that conform to industry-recognized standards for hardening (e.g., DISA STIGs, CIS Benchmarks or OEM security guides).
- An IT infrastructure team, or similar function, ensures that statutory, regulatory and contractual cybersecurity and data privacy obligations are addressed to ensure secure configurations are designed, built and maintained.
- Active Directory (AD), or a similar technology, is used to centrally manage identities and permissions. Only by exception due to a technical or business limitation are solutions authorized to operate a decentralized access control program for systems, applications and services.
- An IAM function, or similar function, provisions and deprovisions incident responders with temporary emergency accounts.
Level 4 — Quantitatively Controlled
See C|P-CMM3. There are no defined C|P-CMM4 criteria, since it is reasonable to assume a quantitatively-controlled process is not necessary to establish and control "emergency access only" accounts.
Level 5 — Continuously Improving
See C|P-CMM4. There are no defined C|P-CMM5 criteria, since it is reasonable to assume a continuously-improving process is not necessary to establish and control "emergency access only" accounts.
Assessment Objectives
- IAC-15.9_A01 a process exists to establish "emergency access only" accounts.
- IAC-15.9_A02 "emergency access only" accounts are controlled.