AppSec Incident Response Course, Application Security is a field full of incidents. How will you deal with an incident vs event.
Course Description
Each day of this course will feature a video from our Application Security Foundations Level 3 course. You can either watch the video on our academy or read the text where we’ll recap everything. Afterwards, we’ll test your understanding through a quick two-question quiz.
The topics that will be covered are:
- What is Incident Response?
- Create an incident response process
- Inventory
- Backups and Rollbacks
- During the Incident (The Process)
- Post-Mortem
- Wrap-up
Incident response found its way into our technological vernacular back in 1988 when the first internet worm — dubbed “The Morris Worm” — was released. In response, the Computer Emergency Response Team/ Coordination Center (CERT/CC) by DARPA was formed.
The goal of this nascent organization was to provide a central hub for communicating and coordinating a response to security incidents. In a nutshell, the goal of incident response is to quickly contain and mitigate an incident, with an impetus to limit damage while reducing recovery time and costs.
Incident response found its way into our technological vernacular back in 1988 when the first internet worm — dubbed “The Morris Worm” — was released. In response, the Computer Emergency Response Team/ Coordination Center (CERT/CC) by DARPA was formed.
The goal of this nascent organization was to provide a central hub for communicating and coordinating a response to security incidents. In a nutshell, the goal of incident response is to quickly contain and mitigate an incident, with an impetus to limit damage while reducing recovery time and costs.
Incident response found its way into our technological vernacular back in 1988 when the first internet worm — dubbed “The Morris Worm” — was released. In response, the Computer Emergency Response Team/ Coordination Center (CERT/CC) by DARPA was formed.
The goal of this nascent organization was to provide a central hub for communicating and coordinating a response to security incidents. In a nutshell, the goal of incident response is to quickly contain and mitigate an incident, with an impetus to limit damage while reducing recovery time and costs.