MON-08.2: Access by Subset of Privileged Users
Mechanisms exist to restrict access to the management of event logs to privileged users with a specific business need.
Control Question: Does the organization restrict access to the management of event logs to privileged users with a specific business need?
General (26)
US (13)
| Framework | Mapping Values |
|---|---|
| US CISA CPG 2022 | 2.U |
| US CMMC 2.0 Level 2 (source) | AU.L2-3.3.9 |
| US CMMC 2.0 Level 3 (source) | AU.L2-3.3.9 |
| US CMS MARS-E 2.0 | AU-9(4) |
| US FedRAMP R4 | AU-9(4) |
| US FedRAMP R4 (moderate) | AU-9(4) |
| US FedRAMP R4 (high) | AU-9(4) |
| US FedRAMP R5 (source) | AU-9(4) |
| US FedRAMP R5 (moderate) (source) | AU-9(4) |
| US FedRAMP R5 (high) (source) | AU-9(4) |
| US IRS 1075 | AU-9(4) |
| US SSA EIESR 8.0 | 5.4 |
| US - TX TX-RAMP Level 2 | AU-9(4) |
EMEA (2)
| Framework | Mapping Values |
|---|---|
| EMEA Germany C5 2020 | OPS-16 |
| EMEA Israel CDMO 1.0 | 21.14 |
Americas (1)
| Framework | Mapping Values |
|---|---|
| Americas Canada ITSP-10-171 | 03.03.08.A 03.03.08.B |
Capability Maturity Model
Level 0 — Not Performed
There is no evidence of a capability to restrict access to the management of event logs to privileged users with a specific business need.
Level 1 — Performed Informally
Continuous Monitoring (MON) efforts are ad hoc and inconsistent. CMM Level 1 control maturity would reasonably expect all, or at least most, the following criteria to exist:
- Generating event logs and the review of event logs is narrowly-focused to business-critical systems and/ or systems that store, processes and/ or transmit sensitive/regulated data.
- Secure baseline configurations generate logs that contain sufficient information to establish necessary details of activity and allow for forensics analysis.
- Secure baseline configurations restrict access to event logs from privileged users to protect event logs and audit tools from unauthorized access, modification and deletion.
Level 2 — Planned & Tracked
Continuous Monitoring (MON) 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 Identify cybersecurity and data protection controls that are appropriate to address applicable statutory, regulatory and contractual requirements for situational awareness management. o Configure alerts for critical or sensitive data that is stored, transmitted and processed on assets. o Use a structured process to review and analyze logs.
- Situational awareness management is decentralized (e.g., a localized/regionalized function) and uses non-standardized methods to implement secure, resilient and compliant practices.
- Secure baseline configurations generate logs that contain sufficient information to establish necessary details of activity and allow for forensics analysis.
- IT/cybersecurity personnel:
- A log aggregator, or similar automated tool, provides an event log report generation capability to aid in detecting and assessing anomalous activities on business-critical systems.
Level 3 — Well Defined
Continuous Monitoring (MON) 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: o Governs asset management that ensures compliance with requirements for asset management. o Leverages a Configuration Management Database (CMDB), or similar tool, as the authoritative source of IT assets. o Centrally collects logs and is protected according to the manufacturer’s security guidelines to protect the integrity of the event logs with cryptographic mechanisms. o Monitors the organization for Indicators of Compromise (IoC) and provides 24x7x365 near real-time alerting capability. o Is configured to alert incident response personnel of detected suspicious events such that incident responders can look to terminate suspicious events.
- An IT Asset Management (ITAM) function, or similar function:
- A Security Incident Event Manager (SIEM), or similar automated tool:
- Both inbound and outbound network traffic is monitored for unauthorized activities to identify prohibited activities and assist incident handlers with identifying potentially compromised systems.
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 restrict access to the management of event logs to privileged users with a specific business need.
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 restrict access to the management of event logs to privileged users with a specific business need.
Assessment Objectives
- MON-08.2_A01 a subset of privileged users or roles authorized to access management of event logging functionality is defined.
- MON-08.2_A02 access to management of audit logging functionality is authorized to only a subset of privileged users or roles.
Technology Recommendations
Micro/Small
- Secure Baseline Configurations (SBC)
- Role Based Access Control (RBAC)
Small
- Secure Baseline Configurations (SBC)
- Role Based Access Control (RBAC)
Medium
- Secure Baseline Configurations (SBC)
- Role Based Access Control (RBAC)
Large
- Secure Baseline Configurations (SBC)
- Role Based Access Control (RBAC)
Enterprise
- Secure Baseline Configurations (SBC)
- Role Based Access Control (RBAC)