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Month: June 2005

Authentication remains a Problem for Web Services Security according to a recent Survery

Posted on June 13, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

The survey, conducted by Evans Data Corporation, highlights that almost one in four developers (23 percent) have devised their own security mechanisms to protect Web services transactions, 22 percent use SSL, nine percent use SOAP headers and 68 percent have either adopted a Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA), or are in the process of developing an adoption plan for an SOA. But actual implementations are still few and far between.

Further more, 79 percent say they encounter organization headwinds when attempting to move their Web services efforts forward and 19 percent also say they can’t find enough IT talent versed in Web services development.

“We found that a majority of companies are not sharing their Web services with other business units across the enterprise,” said Joe McKendrick, Evans Data’s Web services/SOA analyst. “This is a result of not having enough IT talent with Web services skills, as well as management buy-in to the concept.

Web services and SOA need skilled evangelists to help drive the adoption of the technology forward. While one of the main value propositions of Web services is sharing them across an enterprise, the survey has found that 55% of Web services are being shared with only one or no other business units within their companies.

http://www.ebcvg.com/articles.php?id=766

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Symantec unwraps intrusion detection

Posted on June 13, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

Symantec’s new Critical System Protection 4.5 is based on technology from Platform Logic, a company Symantec acquired in December.

Like other behaviour-based intrusion detection products, Critical System Protection 4.5 defends networks by monitoring program behaviour, and spotting and blocking viruses and worms. It’s designed to protect corporate desktops and servers against unknown attacks.

Symantec has overhauled Platform Logic’s original AppFire software to make it compatible with its other products, said Chirantan Desai, director of product management at the company. Critical System Protection 4.5 requires its own management interface, but Symantec is working on a common interface for its products, he said. Desai said the new software, aimed at large enterprises, is meant to be used with other Symantec products — specifically, AntiVirus Corporate Edition and Client Security.

Where the Critical System Protection provides behaviour-based defenses, Client Security includes signature-based intrusion protection. Signature-based intrusion detection products detect attacks based on definitions that are created by the product vendor and regularly updated, much like antivirus definitions.

Rival McAfee’s Entercept software offers protection based on both behavioural rules and intrusion prevention signatures. The company, formerly known as Network Associates, is scheduled to announce on Monday that Entercept now runs on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 servers. The product already supports Microsoft’s Windows and Sun Microsystems’ Solaris operating systems.

Symantec’s Critical System Protection 4.5 is due out by the end of June and will run on Windows XP and Windows 2000 (server and client), Windows Server 2003 and Suse Linux and Solaris.

http://news.zdnet.co.uk/internet/security/0,39020375,39203516,00.htm

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Companies will Replace VPNs

Posted on June 10, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

The study, conducted by Infonetics Research, is based on interviews with network managers from small, medium and large organizations for five markets.

The study revealed the following findings: Security remains top concern when implementing VPNs, rated a barrier by over 33 percent of the respondents, most respondents keep VPN products in use for 2-4 years across, total penetration of SSL VPN for remote access if fairly high, with 39 percent of remote access respondents using it now, 14 percent use fully managed VPN services and the money is spread across a wide range of providers.

“VPN and firewall appliances are the most popular devices for deploying VPNs across size groups and verticals, followed by router-based products,” said Jeff Wilson, principal analyst for VPNs and security at Infonetics Research. All VPN/firewall appliances are folding in additional security technologies, and the line between VPN/firewall devices and integrated security appliances is rapidly disappearing.”

http://www.ebcvg.com/articles.php?id=763

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Security Tops List of Financial Executives Concerns

Posted on June 10, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

“Companies recognize how vulnerable they are,” said Jerry Boltin, a senior partner and the Business Intelligence practice leader in CSC’s Consulting Group. “They see the growing number of news articles about customer information being accessed or stolen and they wonder, ‘If these guys can be breached, how secure are we?'”

Financial executives ranked “Facilitating analysis and decision making (business intelligence)” as the area most constrained by the lack of appropriate technology solutions.

The survey also found a much higher than expected level of planned investments in analytic and decision support information, particularly among large entities.

The survey examined a variety of additional pertinent issues, including financial executives’ views related to financial management, IT strategies and the use of technology applications.

http://www.ebcvg.com/articles.php?id=762

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Juniper Brings Best Of IPsec, SSL To VPN Lineup

Posted on June 10, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

With the 5.0 version of Instant Virtual Extranet, the platform Juniper’s SSL VPN family runs on, the vendor is adding a new dual-mode feature that can automatically switch between IPsec and SSL for transport. This flexibility could help customers cut costs as they decrease their reliance on separate IPsec infrastructures, said Steve Fuller, president and CTO of solution provider Networks Group, Brighton, Mich.

“I’ve had customers who deployed SSL but kept their IPsec infrastructure up and running, usually for a select subset of power users.”

The upgrade also adds enhanced remediation capabilities to the Juniper Endpoint Defense Initiative (JEDI) that enable a network to propose fixes for devices that try to connect but do not meet security requirements, Ganitsky said.

http://www.securitypipeline.com/news/164301972

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Security guidelines for U.S. agencies due in July

Posted on June 10, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

The assessment guidelines, to be released in NIST Special Publication 800-53A early next month, are designed to enable periodic testing and evaluation of the security controls federal agencies need to put in place, said Ron Ross, project leader of NIST’s Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA) Implementation Project.

The mandatory security rules themselves were released in February in a separate NIST document, called Special Publication 800-53 (download PDF). That document details the baseline security controls for different categories of federal information management systems.

The security rules cover 17 different areas, including access control, incident response, business continuity and disaster recoverability, and will become a required Federal Information Processing Standard by year’s end for all federal systems except those related to national security. The guidelines are designed to allow federal agencies to assess “if mandated controls have been implemented correctly, are operating as intended and are … meeting the organization’s security requirements,” Ross said.

The NIST assessment guidelines are “very closely aligned” to SP 800-53, Ross said.

The first draft will detail assessment procedures for five of the 17 security controls described in the February document but will eventually include guidelines for all the rules. Every security control mandated in SP 800-53 will have an associated assessment method and procedure, Ross said. For example, a security requirement that federal agencies have formal information back-up processes will have an associated procedure describing how compliance can be evaluated, Ross said.

The guide can be used for agency self-assessments, by certification agents and auditors to do independent testing and even by IT systems developers, according to Ross.

“The goal of 800-53A is right on target,” said Alan Paller director of research at the SANS Institute, a Washington-based security information center.

Too often, a lack of clear guidelines leads to situations where mandated security controls are interpreted in different ways, Paller said. “The greatest mistake is when people write what needs to be done but not how it needs to be done,” he said. How effective the guidelines will be depends on how much detail it provides to information security assessors, Paller said. “If it was written by people who have really protected systems and cleaned up after attacks, it is likely to provide what is absolutely needed,” he said.

On the other hand, if the document was crafted by “policy people” with little hands-on experience, it may not be of much practical value, he said. While such assessment guides can be useful, “if a lot of the underpinning details are not addressed it can give a false sense of compliance,” said Will Ozier president of OPA Inc., a Vacaville, Calif.-based risk management consultancy.

http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/story/0,10801,102409,00.html?source=x73

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