Am I reading the right user guide?
Am I reading the right user guide?
Certain connectors have more than one user guide. It depends on the environment's setup and the Connector's available releases (new vs. older revisions).
To access the relevant user guide to your environment, click on the "How to connect" button on the Connector's setup page. Doing so will direct you to the user guide that aligns with your specific environment, ensuring relevancy and accuracy.
Overview
Why Mandiant?
The Mandiant connector is a TI (Threat Intelligence) connector that enriches your Vulcan Platform's existing threat intelligence data. Mandiant adds another layer of intelligence to the CVE severity based on extensive vulnerability research.
Vulcan Cyber acknowledges the high reliability of Mandiant TI and the dependency of many Security Engineers and CISOs on it as their primary source of Cyber Threat Intelligence. Therefore, we offer a dedicated connector that consolidates and aggregates the TI data from Mandiant.
Read all about the value you gain out of this integration here.
Mandiant Connector Details
Supported products | Mandiant v4 API |
Category | Threat Intelligence |
Integration type | UNI directional (data is transferred from the Connector to the Vulcan Platform in one direction) |
Supported version and type | V4 API |
What do you get as a CISO/Security Engineer?
Identify new Mandiant-tagged vulnerabilities and take action immediately
Filter to view the most recent vulnerabilities with the highest Mandiant risk rating and assign tasks by taking a remediation action on a vulnerability.
There is a dedicated Threat tag for the Mandiant risk score so you can identify if there is TI info from Mandiant and assess the related risk.
Explore the Mandiant Report and CVE analysis through the Vulcan Platform
Look into CVE analysis by accessing the Mandiant TI data, the Vulcan TI data, available fixes, and related assets. Then, take your next step of remediation action based on the consolidated data in the Vulcan Platform.
Access aggregated and correlated CVE Threat Intelligence reports collected from Mandiant:
Go to Vulnerabilities > Enter a vulnerability that has the Mandiant Risk tag > Click on the Threat Intelligence tab > Explore the Mandiant Reports:
Expand a report to get valuable details such as description, related CVE, attacking ease, and more.
The Reports are organized from the most recent and highest risk score to the oldest and lowest risk score.
You are exposed to the most valuable cyber-related information from Mandiant consolidated into a concise block of data (Description, Risk rating, Exploit rating, Attaching ease, Exploitation consequence, Exploits, and related CVEs)
Connector Setup
Prerequisites and user permissions
To establish a sync between your Vulcan Platform and your Mandiant subscription, you need the following:
Getting a Mandiant Vulnerabilities Subscription
To get the user permissions for the endpoint and access reports, ensure you have a 'Vulnerabilities' subscription.
Go to Mandiant Advantage and log in.
Go to Settings and review your user permissions.
Make sure the Vulnerabilities subscription is enabled. To enable a Vulnerabilities subscription, contact Mandiant support or click Request Upgrade.
Login to Mandiant Advantage to check your subscription type.
For more info, review Mandiant documentation at: https://docs.mandiant.com/home/mati-threat-intelligence-api-v4
Getting Mandiant API v4 Key
To use the API, you need to get Mandiant API v4 keys:
Go to Mandiant Advantage and log in.
Go to Settings > API Access and Keys
Generate a set of API keys (Public and Private keys)
Save the Keys somewhere safe.
Configuring the Mandiant v4 Connector
Log in to your Vulcan Cyber dashboard and go to Connectors.
Click on Add a Connector.
Click on the Mandiant icon.
Set up the Connector as follows:
Set the number of days (1-14) to fetch to fetch past reports.
Click the Test Connectivity button to verify that Vulcan Cyber can connect to your Mandiant instance, then click Create (or Save Changes).
Allow some time for the sync to complete. Then, you can review the sync status under Log on the Connector's setup page.
To confirm the sync is complete, navigate to the Connectors page. Once the Mandiant icon shows Connected, the sync is complete.
Mandiant in the Vulcan Platform
Viewing and Taking Action on Vulnerabilities with Mandiant Threat Tag
To view vulnerabilities with Mandiant Threat Tag:
Use the Search or Filter input box to select the Vulnerability Threat Tag > Mandiant Risk Level and/or Exploitation state.
(Optional) Click on any vulnerability for more vulnerability details.
Here is an example of how the Mandiant-ingested information looks like in the Vulnerability details card in the Vulcan Platform:
(Optional) To Take Action on a vulnerability or more, click Take Action.
Automating remediation actions on vulnerabilities with Manadiant Threat Tags
Large environments quickly become unmanageable if constant manual attention and effort are necessary to remediate vulnerabilities. You can take advantage of the automation capabilities of Vulcan Cyber and the Mandiant Connector.
Use the Vulnerability> Threats Tags condition to create automation based on Threat Tags and Attack Vectors, such as Threat Intelligence tags by Mandiant or Recorded Future.
From Mandiant to the Vulcan Platform - Data Mapping
The Vulcan Platform integrates with Mandiant through API (v4) to pull relevant vulnerability enrichment data and map it into the Vulcan Platform pages and fields.
Mandiant enrichment data is displayed in the Threat Intelligence tab for each relevant, unique vulnerability, according to the matching CVEs of the vulnerability.
The imported data is grouped by report.
Data Fields Mapping
Mandiant field | Vulcan field |
cve_id | CVE ID |
title | Vulnerability Title |
cwe_details | CWE ID |
cwe | CWE |
exploitation_state | Exploitation State |
risk_rating | Risk Rating |
common_vulnerability_scores(base_score) | CVSS Base Score |
common_vulnerability_scores(temporal_score) | CVSS Temporal Score |
common_vulnerability_scores(vector_string) | CVSS Vector |
common_vulnerability_scores(attack_complexity) | Attack Complexity |
description | Description |
executive_summary | Executive Summary |
exploitation_consequence | Exploitation Consequence |
was_zero_day | Was Zero Day |
available_mitigation | Available Mitigation |
workarounds | Workarounds |
link | Mandiant link |
exploits | Exploits |
Vulnerability Risk Level mapping
Mandiant Risk Level | Mandiant Risk Level Threat Tag in Vulcan |
Critical |
|
High |
|
Medium |
|
Low |
|
Threat Tags Mapping
Mandiant Threat Tag (exploration state) | Mandiant Risk Tag in Vulcan |
No Known |
|
Available |
|
Confirmed |
|
Anticipated |
|
Wide |
|
API Endpoints in Use
API version: v4
API | Use in Vulcan |
Generate access tokens for running other APIs | |
Get Vulnerability data |
FAQ
How is the risk score calculated when integrating with Mandiant?
Vulnerabilities that have the "Mandiant risk" threat tag will have a custom risk calculation as described in the table below:
Mandiant Threat tags | Risk calculation and score |
| 100 |
| 85 + 0.15 (15%) Tags score |
| The risk score in the Vulcan Cyber platform isn't affected |
| 10 + 0.3 (30%) Tags score + 0.2 (20%) Threat tags |
If a vulnerability has several CVEs and some of them have different Mandiant risk scores, what determines the Mandiant risk
threat tag?
The CVE that has the higher Mandiant risk score determines the Mandiant risk
tag the vulnerability gets.
For example, if there is a vulnerability that has 4 CVEs, 2 of which have a Mandiant risk score of Medium and one has Critical, the vulnerability will have the threat tag of Mandiant risk: CRITICAL
.
What happens if a vulnerability is identified as Medium by the Vulcan Platform and High/Critical by Mandiant TI?
It means that the Mandiant research team has done some further research on the vulnerability and came to the conclusion that the risk is higher than we thought (i.e., higher than what the official threat intel sources report).