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#1State of South Carolina Information Security Analysis Initial Assessment Overview May 8, 2013 SOUTH CAROLINA SPIRO SPERO QUE PARATI DUM QUIS SEPARABIT MELIOREM LAPSA LOCAVIT 1776 OPIBUS ANIMIS OPT SPES Our services were performed in accordance with the Statement on Standards for Consulting Services that is issued by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). We provided to the State of South Carolina our observations and recommendations. However, our services did not constitute an engagement to provide audit, compilation, review, or attestation services as described in the pronouncements on professional standards issued by the AICPA, and, therefore, we will not express an opinion or other form of assurance with respect to our services. In addition, our services did not constitute an examination or compilation of prospective financial information in accordance with standards established by the AICPA. We did not provide any legal advice regarding our services; the responsibility for all legal issues with respect to these matters is the State of South Carolina's. It is further understood that the State of South Carolina's management is responsible for, among other things, identifying and ensuring compliance with laws and regulations applicable to the State of South Carolina's activities. The sufficiency of the services performed is solely the responsibility of the State of South Carolina. In addition, we assumed that the information and data provided to us by the State of South Carolina was complete and accurate. This governance presentation is intended solely for the information and internal use of the State of South Carolina, and is not intended to be and should not be used by any other person or entity. No other person or entity is entitled to rely, in any manner, or for any purpose, on this draft presentation.#2Approach#3Security Assessment Approach . • Step 1: Planning Developed TASKA project plan Arranged for necessary logistics (technical and managerial) Collected relevant policies, procedures, and guidelines documents Step 2: Security risk evaluation Conducted vulnerability assessments for three agencies -Analyzed 63GB of log files - Scanned a range of about 200,000 IP addresses -Assessed 58 applications -Reviewed the configuration of seven network devices Conducted three agency- level information security risk assessments - Conducted 37 interviews with agency representatives to assess risks and existence of managerial, operational and technical controls -Reviewed 134 supporting documents of existing policies or evidence of existing controls Step 3: Governance strategy/recommendation " • Recommended a governance model based on: -Interviews with three state Chief Information Security Officers in states with either a federated or centralized security governance model - Reviews of recommendations from the SIG report and findings from the 2012 Deloitte NASCIO Cybsersecurity Study of national trends - Discussions with the Budget Control Board Developed a roadmap for the Information Security program Developed FY14 budget estimates based on the foundational aspects of the INFOSEC roadmap Step 4: Reporting • . Documented observations and remediation options Reviewed individual agency risk assessments and vulnerability assessment results with Directors of respective agencies Reviewed SFY14 budget, governance, and INFOSEC roadmap with Trustees and Director of B&CB Summarized the recommendations that were developed on the assessments, governance, INFOSEC roadmap, and budget which are included in this initial report 2 This presentation is intended solely for the information and internal use of the State of South Carolina, and is not intended to be and should not be used by any other person or entity. No other person or entity is entitled to rely, in any manner, or for any purpose, on this draft presentation.#4South Carolina's Decentralized Technology and Information Security Governance Structure Leads to Challenges... Technology and Information Security Governance Structure Budget & Control Board Agency Enterprise Budget & Control Board Executive Director Budget & Control Board Chief of Staff Division of State Information Technology (DSIT) Division Director Security Agency Director I I Information Technology Solutions Committee (ITSC) Chief Information Officer (CIO) IT Director / IT Manager Information Security Officer (ISO) IT Manager Note: The ITSC is comprised of 13 members representing functional groups, 3 at-large members with knowledge in technology areas and the Deputy Division Director for Enterprise Projects at DSIT. Note: The Security function performs continuous Information Security monitoring of networks and other IT assets for signs of attack, anomalies, and inappropriate activities. 3 • • . • • Challenges South Carolina does not have standard statewide technology or Information Security policies. There is no state entity with the authority and responsibility to provide technology or security leadership, standards, policies, and oversight. Information Security procedures and protocols have been largely uncoordinated and outdated, exposing the State to greater risks of internal and external cyber-attacks on Information Technology (IT) infrastructure and data records. There are no standards against which agencies are measured, nor are there recurring processes to perform systematic risk assessments. Agencies are conducting mission critical Information Security activities but uneven staffing, skill, and experience does not leave room to be proactive in an environment of increasing vulnerability and threat. Lack of employee awareness training and a culture of complacency creates ongoing exposure. Agencies have a significant variety of software, hardware and information which increases the number of exposure points and leads to higher expenses, thus diverting money from underfunded areas such as Information Security staffing and training. Agencies have a degree of skepticism and distrust toward the Division of State Information Technology (DSIT) owing to a history of friction, primarily related to the cost of services provided. These historical trust issues impair DSIT's ability to "drive" any change initiatives. This presentation is intended solely for the information and internal use of the State of South Carolina, and is not intended to be and should not be used by any other person or entity. No other person or entity is entitled to rely, in any manner, or for any purpose, on this draft presentation.#5Assessment Recommendations#6Approach to Determining an Appropriate Information Security Governance Model for the State 5 Reviewed: Interviewed: Inspector General Report Draft Legislation S.334 Governance Models in other States Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) from Other States SEAL OF THE STATE TURBOR 2012 Deloitte-NASCIO Cybersecurity Study AD. MDCC Michigan SEAL OF THE STATE OF LE DU THE GREAT MINNESO Minnesota OF PENNSYLL OF THE STATE SEAL OF VANIA Conducted: Workshops Pennsylvania This presentation is intended solely for the information and internal use of the State of South Carolina, and is not intended to be and should not be used by any other person or entity. No other person or entity is entitled to rely, in any manner, or for any purpose, on this draft presentation.#76 Role Foundational Elements of the Information Security Program An effective information security program requires collaboration across the foundational functions 1 Privacy Privacy is the ability of an individual or group to seclude themselves or information about themselves and thereby reveal themselves selectively. A privacy function in government determines what data needs to be protected. Information Security Information security is the practice of defending classified and protected information from unauthorized access, use, disclosure, disruption, modification, perusal, inspection, recording or destruction. Technology & Security Operations The technology function provides and operates the technical infrastructure and security infrastructure in accordance with the policies defined by the Information Security function. This presentation is intended solely for the information and internal use of the State of South Carolina, and is not intended to be and should not be used by any other person or entity. No other person or entity is entitled to rely, in any manner, or for any purpose, on this draft presentation.#8Governance Models: Decentralized, Federated, Centralized Decentralized Model Federated Model Centralized Model 7 • • • Agencies operate with full autonomy while attempting to maintain global standards in order to meet specific (but limited) enterprise requirements. Benefits The enterprise sets strategy, develops frameworks and policies, facilitates communication and provides subject matter experience while agencies remain responsible for the implementation. Control • Flexibility for agencies to run their operations. • • Ability to respond efficiently to specific requirements. Challenges Lack of common roles, responsibilities and information across the enterprise. Inconsistent definition and application of processes, standards and policies. Higher expenses due to redundancy of software, hardware and information. Highest risk due to many additional exposure points. • • . Benefits Enterprise sets strategy, policy and framework to reduce risk, support collaboration and develop centers of excellence. Representation from the agencies improves decision making. Lower incremental costs due to combination of existing and new resources. • Agencies are responsible for their security, keeping control close to the source. Challenges • Slower decision making as ownership is distributed throughout the enterprise. • Agencies may not prioritize security or may not be able to find people with the required skill sets. The enterprise provides a single point of control for decision making with agencies reporting directly to the central entity. Benefits Enterprise establishes, controls, and enforces policies and standards. • Improved oversight of Information Security within the organization. • • • • Increased speed of decision making due to single point of control and accountability. Greater degree of control over the creation and distribution of information. Challenges Difficult to implement effectively in a highly decentralized organization. Risk of poor decision making due to lack of agency representation. Decision making Proposed model This presentation is intended solely for the information and internal use of the State of South Carolina, and is not intended to be and should not be used by any other person or entity. No other person or entity is entitled to rely, in any manner, or for any purpose, on this draft presentation.#98 Governance Model: Reporting of Security Functions Budget & Control Board (BCB) Executive Director Enterprise Budget & Control Board Budget & Control Board COO Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) D-CISO (HIPAA/HITECH) D-CISO (FERPA) D-CISO (IRS 1075) Environment and Land Use Deputy CISO Law & Justice D-CISO Finance & Administration D-CISO Higher Education D-CISO Information Security Governance Committee Information Security Advisory Council (Private Sector) Agency Director Description Consider establishing the role of Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) at the Enterprise level. This role would report administratively to the Chief of Staff of the Budget & Control Board. Consider establishing the role of seven Deputy Chief Information Security Officers roles at the Enterprise level. Each Deputy CISO would serve as a subject matter specialist in a certain field and as the primary point of contact for a State Agency for their respective field. These roles would report administratively to the Chief Information Security Officer. The Agency Information Security Officers (ISO) would report administratively to the Director of their Agency with the Deputy Chief Information Security Officer responsible for the Agency providing input on hiring and performance reviews. The Agency ISO would also have a secondary reporting relationship to the CISO. • The Agency Information Security Officers are not required to be a full-time position and may also report to other positions like Agency CIOS and not directly to the Agency Director. Agency Agency Information Security Officer Agency Information Security Staff This presentation is intended solely for the information and internal use of the State of South Carolina, and is not intended to be and should not be used by any other person or entity. No other person or entity is entitled to rely, in any manner, or for any purpose, on this draft presentation.#109 Technology Process / Policy Organization Roadmap Recommendations " Build Foundation Governance Establish organization COO, CISO, Deputy CISOS CPO Awareness, training and talent End user awareness and training program Training and professional development Internship and campus recruiting program Security framework Security risk assessments Security policy Data classification Agency risk profile ■ Data protection Secure network engineering Threat monitoring and control Continuous vulnerability assessment and remediation Π Evolve Job performance expectations framework for Information Security workforce Joint performance reviews of agency ISOs Identify talent strategies Work with universities to evolve cybersecurity programs Security policies, procedures and standards complementing agency specific policies, procedures, and standards Agency security plans Incident response team - Digital first responders Establish ongoing compliance program Agency security shared services Continuous threat and vulnerability management Expand data protection Identity and access management Cyber threat analytics and intelligence " Leading in Class Effective and collaborative governance Grow and retain talent Broad professional development Metrics and monitoring Mature cybersecurity talent sourcing program with local universities Automated security functions allow for automated identification, prevention and closure of risks Secure self-healing Infrastructure Implement governance, risk, and compliance tools Develop agency centers of excellence This presentation is intended solely for the information and internal use of the State of South Carolina, and is not intended to be and should not be used by any other person or entity. No other person or entity is entitled to rely, in any manner, or for any purpose, on this draft presentation.#1110 Technology Process/ Policy Organization • Fiscal Year 2014 Budgetary Estimate Activity Enterprise Security Office State FY2014 Budget Estimates Future Reoccurring Budget Estimates • COO Office • CISO Office $305,000 $283,000 $295,000 $276,000 . • • Planning and strategy Governance Enterprise security technology Cyber incident response and SWAT $290,000 $276,000 $1,210,000 $1,150,000 $1,680,000 $1,574,000 $478,000 $448,000 Security training and cyber culture $232,000 $218,000 Enterprise Privacy Office $470,000 $440,000 Awareness, Training and Talent . End user awareness and training program $350,000 $350,000 . Training and professional development $50,000 $50,000 • Annual security conference $20,000 $20,000 • Internship and campus recruiting program $200,000 $50,000 Security risk framework and policy Security risk assessments Data classification Enterprise Technology and Remediation Primarily accounted for by Task B activities • Secure network engineering $2,385,000 • Data protection $3,170,000 $880,000 $1,150,000 • Threat monitoring and control $1,305,000 $140,000 • Continuous vulnerability assessment and remediation $2,490,000 $40,000 $14,930,000 $7,345,000 This presentation is intended solely for the information and internal use of the State of South Carolina, and is not intended to be and should not be used by any other person or entity. No other person or entity is entitled to rely, in any manner, or for any purpose, on this draft presentation.#12About Deloitte Deloitte refers to one or more of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited, a UK private company limited by guarantee, and its network of member firms, each of which is a legally separate and independent entity. Please see www.deloitte.com/about for a detailed description of the legal structure of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited and its member firms. Please see www.deloitte.com/us/about for a detailed description of the legal structure of Deloitte LLP and its subsidiaries. Certain services may not be available to attest clients under the rules and regulations of public accounting.

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