17.3. Sifting Through Logged Data

Now that the logging information has been secured, centralized, and sorted into separate files, the next step is to determine how to isolate important information. A trap that some administrators fall into is relying too heavily on monitoring information to determine when there is a problem and using logging data only after an incident has occurred. Monitoring information is important, but it doesn’t always tell when there is a problem. Logged data can help bring to light emerging patterns on the network, which indicate there may be a potential security breach.

As has already been mentioned, the problem is that so much logging data is generated by network devices that relying on a human to pick out patterns ...

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