I sould say the same for threat actor or any other object.
You would want to sight a threat actor with an observation in order to provide what you actually saw that made you think you had seen the threat actor. You wouldn’t describe the threat actor itself in
CybOX, then, you would describe what you saw in cyber that made you create a sighting of it.
From:
"Jordan, Bret" <bret.jordan@bluecoat.com>
Date: Thursday, June 30, 2016 at 7:29 AM
To: "Wunder, John A." <jwunder@mitre.org>
Cc: "cti@lists.oasis-open.org" <cti@lists.oasis-open.org>
Subject: Re: [cti] CybOX Containers in STIX
What about a threat actor. ??
Bret
Sent from my Commodore 64
IIRC the reason count is on Observation rather than Sighting was that people wanted to have a count available on observations that weren’t tied to sightings. For example, to say that they
saw an IP address 100 times without it being a sighting of any particular indicator. So to avoid having two count fields it was put just on observation.
I do agree w/ Terry that the reason you would want to sight a campaign with an observation would be to provide what you actually saw that made you think you had seen the campaign. You wouldn’t
describe the campaign itself in CybOX, then, you would describe what you saw in cyber that made you create a sighting of it.
John
Hi Bret,
An observation can be attached to the campaign object to describe the evidence that let someone to determine the campaign was attributed to that threat actor. I forsee observations being attached to nearly all the objects to provide the 'raw data' that the
producer used to come up with their assertion.
I am still puzzled at why we need sightings to effectively be a specialised 'summary' relationship, and but I am willing to go with the community opinion on this.
I do wonder why we can have multiple cybox objects within an observation, as well as multiple observations within a sighting. When do we use each one? When should we use the multiple objects within observation compared to when we should use multiple observations
within the sighting? We should either pick one object to house the multiplicity, or at least provide guidance on which data should be put where. E.g. when should an observed cybox object be put in the same observation, or within a different observation? Should
someone do one observation a day with all their cybox objects in there? Same thing for sightings.
Cheers
Terry MacDonald
Cosive
On 30/06/2016 06:01, "Jordan, Bret" <bret.jordan@bluecoat.com> wrote:
I do not think we need it to be required... But then again, I am in favor of also moving the "count" field from Observation to Sighting. For example, if I want to sight a Threat Actor or a Campaign, it does not really make sense to include
an Observation that uses CybOX, since CybOX can not describe a "person" or an abstract concept like a Campaign.
Bret Jordan CISSP
Director of Security Architecture and Standards | Office of the CTO
PGP Fingerprint: 63B4 FC53 680A 6B7D 1447 F2C0 74F8 ACAE 7415 0050
"Without cryptography vihv vivc ce xhrnrw, however, the only thing that can not be unscrambled is an egg."
One other question: right now, the Sighting TLO requires at least one Observation, so you can’t have a sighting without an Observation (observation doesn’t require
CybOX, however). Is that what we want? As a reminder, the use cases were:
1. “I saw this Indicator”
2. “I saw this Indicator 12 times between X time and Y time”
3. “I saw this Indicator and here’s the specific observation
of what I saw”
5. (#2 and #3 for campaign)
In theory #1 doesn’t require the observation, but I suppose maybe it should be required for consistency?
We talked about this topic again on the working call and there seemed to be general agreement there as well that the embedded approach was preferred. Given that,
and the fact that discussion has died down, I move that we open a ballot to confirm the approach to representing CybOX inside an observation as well as the current definitions of Observation and Sighting.
Before opening the ballot, though, can everyone please review the current sections in the Google Docs? I’d like to avoid the problem we’re having with Object Markings,
where we get a lot of very good comments after the ballot has opened. I’d rather work through as much as possible before the ballot. I would call this priority one on STIX right now…if you only have 15 minutes this week to spend on STIX, please spend
it reviewing the Observation and Sighting sections of the STIX TLOs document.
They can do that be referencing the Observations or other TLOs in STIX if they so desire.
Director of Security Architecture and Standards | Office of the CTO
PGP Fingerprint: 63B4 FC53 680A 6B7D 1447 F2C0 74F8 ACAE 7415 0050
"Without cryptography vihv vivc ce xhrnrw, however, the only thing that can not be unscrambled is an egg."
We understand the problem so much more now than we did back in DC. And the in looking at the structure it really does not makes sense to have a STIX TLO called cybox-container. In DC it was all a bunch of hand-waving, we never
actually spelled out the contents of the container. But now that we have put pen to paper, it really does not fit or work.
Further, if other standards want to use CybOX they can use it the same way that STIX and MAEC are going to use it. MAEC for example is not going to use STIX objects to use CybOX data. That just does not make sense.
Thanks,
Bret
Bret Jordan CISSP
Director of Security Architecture and Standards | Office of the CTO
Blue Coat Systems
PGP Fingerprint: 63B4 FC53 680A 6B7D 1447 F2C0 74F8 ACAE 7415 0050
"Without cryptography vihv vivc ce xhrnrw, however, the only thing that can not be unscrambled is an egg."
On Jun 24, 2016, at 03:15, Trey Darley <trey@kingfisherops.com>
wrote:
On 23.06.2016 14:28:33, John-Mark Gurney wrote:
I will say that part of the reason that #2 was chosen at the F2F was
that there are use cases for other standards, like DFAX, where they
want to be able to reference the CybOX object directly. With #2, the
CybOX container now has a unique GUID that can be addressed, but as
was pointed out, this still doesn't prevent referncing the CybOX
data, as an implementation can refer to the GUID of the Observation
TLO.
This was the infamous Arglebargle discussion, which was both heated
and long. Option #2 was a hard-won compromise to support the needs of
DFAX as expressed by Eoghan Casey et al.
Personally, I'm happy to go with option #1 for all the reasons
elucidated by John and Allan but in consideration of the many hours of
debate that went into the option #2 compromise, we should reenter that
discussion with sensitivity.
From a technical perspective it is not clear to me why DFAX couldn't
define its own container for CybOX, much as STIX and MAEC are doing.
If I recall correctly (and please weigh in here, good people of DC3!)
the primary motivation behind having a container object living in
CybOX land was DC3's desire to reuse CybOX observables^Wwhatever we're
calling them now across STIX, DFAX, and MAEC.
It's probably worth devoting the next TC working call to this topic,
since it's a critical question for STIX Indicators, Observations,
Sightings, not to mention the ongoing work of the CybOX SC and our
friends over at DC3.
--
Cheers,
Trey
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Kingfisher Operations, sprl
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++--------------------------------------------------------------------------++
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"It is easier to move a problem around (for example, by moving the
problem to a different part of the overall network architecture) than
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