Endpoint security refers to the strategies and technologies used to protect devices connected to a network. This guide explores the importance of endpoint security, common threats, and best practices for implementation.
Learn about the various endpoint security solutions available and how they can help organizations defend against cyber attacks. Understanding endpoint security is crucial for safeguarding organizational data and maintaining network integrity.
What is Endpoint Security?
Endpoint Security protects user endpoints (desktop workstations, laptops, and mobile devices) from threats such as malware, ransomware, and zero-days.
What is Considered an Endpoint Security?
In simple terms, an endpoint is one end of a communications channel. It refers to parts of a network that don’t simply relay communications along its channels or switch those communications from one channel to another. An endpoint is where communications originate and are received—in essence, any device that can be connected to a network.
Examples of endpoint devices include:
- Desktops
- Laptops
- Mobile devices
- Tablets
- Smartwatches
- Internet of Things (IoT) devices
- Point-of-Sale (POS) systems
- Medical devices
- Digital printers
- Servers
From a computer security perspective, “endpoint” will most likely refer to a desktop or laptop. Servers and VMs fall into cloud workload protection, while mobile devices (phones, tablets, Chromebooks, etc.) fall into a specialized category of mobile threat defense. This is due to the fact that creating and implementing security software on mobile devices is hugely different when compared to traditional endpoints.
A Brief History of Endpoint Security
Until recently, endpoint security was a bit de-emphasized in the context of information security. For the most part, the malware was originally thought of as a nuisance, although a lot of malware before it—and nearly all malware since—have real teeth, designed to break equipment, destroy data, or steal it outright.
Late 80s to 90s
Even as the internet slowly started to gain widespread usage in the late 80s and early 90s, most malware samples were poorly-written jokes. As an example, the first virus ever to propagate via email was known as “Happy99.” When users clicked on an .exe file disguised as an attachment, the virus would modify itself into a .DLL file, automatically replicating itself into additional emails sent from the user’s client. Its destructive payload was simply an animated display of fireworks. As such, early endpoint security products didn’t have to do much heavy lifting. Most serious intrusion attempts came over the network.
As the 90’s ended, however, a whole bunch of changes started occurring, which dramatically elevated the prominence of endpoint security. First, as we’ve mentioned, there was an email. Firewalls don’t work too well on email viruses, because the packets comprising an email with a malicious attachment don’t look that different from a normal email. The problem was compounded when viruses began to be embedded in Word macros. No problem—just program antivirus to automatically scan all incoming emails.
The 2000s Onward
Then, as the 2000s began, there was a secondary problem—Wi-Fi and laptops. Of course, laptops were available for all of the 90’s, but up until the early 2000s, you wouldn’t expect to connect your laptop to the internet anywhere except inside the office. Suddenly, you could bring your laptop to a café or an airport and go online—and this was a problem. Users could take their laptops outside of the office, but they couldn’t take their firewalls with them because most firewalls were physical appliances embedded in the network.
The security industry tried to solve this problem by selling antivirus software bundled with software firewalls and making users connect to the internet over a VPN. This worked until the rise of SaaS programs (with its accompanying bugbear, Shadow IT) revolutionized computing and made firewalls less effective by increasing the network’s open and unmonitored ports.
Why is Endpoint Security Important?
Increasingly, the endpoint has become the forefront of information security—as endpoints are now the true perimeter of the enterprise. Users now have more control over their endpoints than ever. Even if they can’t install their own programs, they can use whatever tools they want in the cloud. They can choose to work from anywhere in the world. They can choose any way to communicate. This freedom of choice means that a user’s endpoint is far and away the most exposed target for any bad actor looking to target the enterprise—and, as such, it is the most important thing to protect.
The majority of cybersecurity attacks originate at the endpoint. Cybercrime has become a big business. The average ransomware breach cost is $4.62 million USD (IBM Security Cost of a Data Breach Report 2021, compiling primary research conducted by The Ponemon Institute), which is more costly than the average data breach ($4.24M).
On average, a phishing attack takes 213 days to detect and 80 days to contain (Cost of Data Breach Report). 213 days is a lifetime, providing the attacker ample time to move laterally, establish persistence, conduct reconnaissance, plan, and execute an attack.
How Does Endpoint Security Work?
Endpoint security consists of software called an “agent,” installed and executed on an endpoint to protect it from and detect an attack. Endpoint Security solutions work by examining processes, system activity, and files for suspicious or malicious indicators.
Endpoint security solutions offer a centralized management console from which administrators can connect to their enterprise network to monitor, investigate, and respond to incidents. Depending upon the solution, this is accomplished by leveraging an on-premises, hybrid, or cloud approach.
The EPP market essentially uses a SaaS management console, delivered as a cloud service instead of being installed and operated from on-prem infrastructure. The EPP agent is installed on each endpoint and communicates with the management console. The best EPP solutions provide endpoint Security and detection with or without a network connection. When a connection becomes available, endpoint telemetry is uploaded to the cloud and/or data lake for future use (such as threat hunting).
How Does Endpoint Security Software Protect Users?
This is a bit of a tricky question. That’s because security administrators are in a war on two fronts. Users can do more with their endpoints than ever; every new ability unlocks a new attendant danger. On the other front, these dangers are getting more dangerous—hackers are putting more time, effort, and energy into creating advanced malware than ever before.
In order to understand how endpoint security works, you have to understand how malware works. Malware itself is sent as a number of components. Usually, there are two parts to start with—the viral payload itself, which is encrypted, and a separate component that extracts the encrypted file. When a user downloads or otherwise contracts malware, the extractor will either autorun or trick the user into running it.
Once extracted, two additional malware components are revealed. First, there’s the persistence mechanism, which usually takes over legitimate operating system processes in order to ensure that the malware boots up every time the computer turns on. Then, there’s the part which steals user data, encrypts it, and sends it to whoever controls the malware from the other end.
All of these components have, in theory, a recognizable signature. That is to say, an antivirus program should be able to look at an encrypted file—which may take the form of a .txt file full of letters and numbers—and essentially say, “if that file is extracted, it will turn into a copy of CryptXXX. Better delete it.”
In practice, however, traditional endpoint Security misses a huge number of viruses that are tested against it. It is straightforward for malware authors to tweak their software until its encrypted file (known as a “hash”) doesn’t resemble anything the software is programmed to recognize. Furthermore, hackers can modify their malware much faster than security professionals can update their software to detect the changes.
Endpoint Security Software vs. Antivirus Software
Anti-virus software relies upon a library of signatures that an agent compares software against. Known malicious files are not allowed to execute. The problem with anti-virus is that modern threats render it ineffective:
- Fileless and zero-day attacks do not have a signature.
- Malicious files are easily modified to evade signatures.
In contrast, endpoint protection platforms (EPP) typically use machine learning and/or AI to prevent and detect sophisticated attacks, including fileless, zero-days, and ransomware. EPP also provides incident response capabilities such as investigation, triage, and sometimes remediation—and should support a wide variety of operating systems spanning Windows, Linux, and macOS.
Why Choose a Next-Generation Endpoint Security Solution?
Traditional endpoint protection systems are hobbled against any malware that displays characteristics they don’t recognize. Next-generation endpoint security offers something more responsive. SentinelOne, for example, works by tapping the running processes of every endpoint it’s hooked into. The idea is that while it’s quite easy for malware authors to hide the characteristics of their malicious software, it’s much more difficult to hide what they’re doing.
Here’s an analogy: it might be easy for bank robbers to disguise themselves as security guards or janitors. It’s much harder for them to explain away the fact that they’re shoveling money into a bag. The common actions of malware—unauthorized creation or deletion of files, attempting buffer overflows, heap spraying, etc.— are all entirely transparent for SentinelOne as it monitors endpoints from the kernel space on up. Moreover, our solution records how each suspected malware event affects a given endpoint, allowing administrators to rectify viral damage and conduct detailed digital forensics. These features are a small part of why we’ve even been named a Leader in the Gartner Magic Quadrant for Endpoint Security.
How to Choose an Endpoint Security Platform (EPP)
The best endpoint Security platforms use a multi-layered defense against sophisticated threats, combining signatures, static AI, and behavioral AI to protect, detect, and respond to threats in real-time, at machine speed, according to security policies set by security admins.
An ideal endpoint Security solution should include the following functionalities:
Local and Autonomous
Ideally, the EPP would be local and autonomous, meaning it works equally well with or without a network connection; that is, the agent is not reliant upon cloud connectivity to the EPP/EDR management console for Security against malware, ransomware, and zero-day attacks. And, when a cloud connection becomes available, endpoint telemetry is automatically uploaded to a secure data lake, where forensic security analysts can access the data for threat hunting, incident response, and more.
Detection and Response
Look for EPP solutions that also include endpoint detection and response (EDR) capabilities in the same agent. Machine learning and AI within the agent provide real-time detection and response to complex threats, with results backed by third-party testing.
Coverage Across Multiple OSes
A proper EPP solution should provide exceptional capabilities spanning multiple operating systems, not only Windows but also legacy Windows OSes, macOS, and major Linux distributions.
Accelerate Triage and Response
Technology should make our jobs easier, our analyses more intuitive, and our incident response streamlined. Technology scales people, automatically connecting the dots of complex attacks, correlating to MITRE Engenuity ATT&CKⓇ tactics, techniques, and procedures. Triage and response procedures will benefit from AI recognizing related events and consolidating alerts to provide global visibility and reduce alert fatigue. These features allow a cybersecurity team to focus on what matters most and reduce the mean time to resolution (MTTR).
Flexible by Design
Support for multi-tenancy and flexible data retention options help customers only pay for what they need. A flexible solution will also typically be easier to implement with existing IT infrastructure.
Threat Intelligence
Integrated threat intelligence for detection and enrichment from leading 3rd party feeds in combination with proprietary feeds. Threat Intelligence is an excellent way to scale a cybersecurity team’s scope and offensive capability without adding more team members.
The Next Advancements in Endpoint Security
EPP solutions should be multi-tenant by design, a consideration of crucial importance to large organizations. Comprehensive role-based access control (RBAC) is a key component of any Zero Trust security model, providing the flexibility for security administrators to provide the minimum set of privileges and access to the right users to get their job done.
An endpoint security platform would not be much of a platform if it did not integrate with other solutions in the security stack. Look for an API-first architecture: anything a user can do in the UI should be accessible via the API. A healthy platform marketplace can be an indicator of such an API-first design.
Moreover, the platform should be able to ingest data from a variety of sources (e.g., threat intelligence, cloud workloads, IoT devices), recognizing patterns across the stack and distilling actionable insights from this data quickly and efficiently. This begins to move beyond EPP and into the realm of XDR, or Extended Data and Response.
Endpoint Mapping and How to Keep Up with Changes
Knowing what is connected to your network is key to cybersecurity success. Beyond just visibility, advanced device fingerprinting differentiates connected devices by their function so that a security admin will have total visibility and an up-to-date global inventory, not only among user endpoints but also IoT and OT sensors. For example, such a solution should not only help an admin to quickly identify any user endpoints missing an EPP agent but also close those gaps with configurable job automation then.
Advanced Endpoint Security with SentinelOne
SentinelOne’s Singularity™ Platform helps security professionals proactively resolve modern threats at machine speed. Singularity makes the future vision of autonomous, AI-driven cybersecurity today’s reality. Learn how SentinelOne can help your SOC more effectively manage risk across user endpoints, hybrid cloud workloads, IoT, and more. Contact us here and begin the conversation tuned to your unique environment.