In the past decade, governments and financial institutions have become increasingly targeted by criminal organizations and nation state operators who seek to extort and disrupt key societal functions (see examples from countries Martinique, Tonga, and Vanuatu, and public healthcare system UK National Health Service). Individual organizations have been exploited for financial gain and entire banking sectors have been disrupted for political or financial purposes (see examples from countries Ukraine and Taiwan, and cyber espionage group Fancy Bear). Ransomware is a key focus of regulatory bodies in adapting to the new environments, and with this, the cybersecurity regulations and guidance are being updated to adjust to the new threat landscape.
The cybersecurity resource guide was released in 2018 to assist financial institutions with sourcing best practices and third party resources for helping mitigate their exposure to cybercrime, and manage responses. This guide was updated in 2022, with the main expansion being a focus on new resources for controls and guidance around managing ransomware.
The FFIEC's guidance to use the CISA (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency) resources leverages their best practices as the nation's cyber defense agency. As part of a holistic ransomware and threat defense CISA leverages PDNS as a core capability.
"Due to the centrality of DNS for cybersecurity, the Department of Defense (DoD) included DNS filtering as a requirement in its Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC) standard (SC.3.192). A core capability of PDNS is the ability to categorize domain names based on threat intelligence."
One of the industry leaders in the CISA guide to 'selecting a protective DNS service' is Cisco Umbrella. What was once called OpenDNS is now part of Cisco Umbrella, and is a key part of a holistic security approach to defend against ransomware disrupting financial institutions. Through blocking the reach-back it can disrupt the attack chains attempt to download the ransomware package, as well as disrupt the command and control. This can help prevent malicious links from being unintentionally used by trusted insiders, and help control impacts to social engineering attacks.
Cisco Umbrella has a number of capabilities to help financial institutions meet their FFIEC (and other regulatory) requirements. These include:
Cisco Umbrella fits in with the extensive Cisco security portfolio to help financial institutions protect themselves, protect their customers (and their data), and meet the regulatory requirements in doing so. Through managing the DNS vector as part of a comprehensive ransomware posture, Cisco is helping protect financial institutions.