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Cisco, Microsoft in network security showdown

Posted on September 17, 2004December 30, 2021 by admini

The two companies have each proposed competing “end to end” security architectures, marking the latest evolution in network defense–an approach concerned not only with scanning for viruses but also with policing networks to deny connections to machines that don’t conform with security policies.

But for now at least the twin offerings are not interoperable. That means customers might be forced to choose between using technology from one company or the other, unless the two tech giants can strike a deal to guarantee compatibility.

Both Microsoft and Cisco are working on “end to end” network-security setups–systems concerned not only with scanning for viruses but also with denying network connections to machines that don’t conform with security policies.

Bottom line: Unfortunately for customers and their already-tight security budgets, the technologies being pursued by the companies aren’t compatible. But at least one group is already working on an architecture that will use open standards so customers can use technology from any vendor.

Choosing could be tough, given that both companies thoroughly dominate their respective markets: Microsoft has a monopoly in desktop operating systems, and Cisco’s share of the corporate network routing market exceeds 70 percent.

Microsoft and Cisco say they are working to ensure interoperability.

But at this stage, it’s difficult to know how quickly the two sides will come together and what the resulting security plan will look like–or if it’s even feasible to bridge the gap between their technologies at all. “We know how important it is for us to interoperate with Cisco,” said Steve Anderson, director of Microsoft’s Windows server group. “But we’re both big companies, and it takes a lot of time to work this stuff out. Bill Gates and John Chambers have already been talking. We expect to announce the first step in this process sometime this fall when we announce an interoperability agreement.”

A decision is crucial to customers, who now face the prospect of spending their already tight security budgets on running incompatible architectures.

At the heart of the debate is the Remote Authentication Dial In User Service, or Radius, the de facto standard for authenticating users accessing networks remotely. In each of the proposed architectures, the companies use their own Radius servers to centrally enforce security policy and provide administration of user profiles. With Cisco’s architecture, customers must use the Cisco Access Control Server. With Microsoft’s setup, customers are forced to use the Microsoft Windows Internet Authentication Service, or IAS, Radius Server. Cisco Systems, Microsoft and the Trusted Computing Group vendor consortium have all developed plans for comprehensive business security architectures. Currently, the two Radius servers are not interoperable.

This means customers using Cisco networking gear and Microsoft operating software could be forced to install and manage separate Radius servers from each vendor.

Security experts are skeptical that an interoperability agreement for the Radius servers would help much.

“The two approaches are fundamentally different,” said Bill Scull, senior vice president of marketing for Sygate, a security software maker. “I’m not sure how they could interoperate.”

At stake is the success of a new movement in network management that treats security more holistically. As the effects of malicious virus and worm attacks, such as those involving the Sobig and MyDoom viruses, become more costly, companies are looking for solutions that combine traditional virus scanning with network policing to keep attacks from ever entering the network in the first place. Networking, security and software companies have joined efforts to develop more proactive solutions.

Cisco and Microsoft have been at the forefront of this effort, and the success of their plans will be crucial in the fight against new attacks. Late last year Cisco announced its Network Admission Control, or NAC, architecture. In June the company announced it had completed the first phase of the architecture by introducing NAC software on its IP routers. Support on its switches is due in the first half of 2005.

In July, Microsoft announced its Network Access Protection or NAP architecture, which is scheduled to be available sometime in 2005, the company said.

The concepts behind each of the architectures are very similar. Before a user logs on to a network, his or her computer must check in to a third-party machine, controlled by the network administrator, to ensure that the machine meets policy requirements. If it does, the user is allowed access to the network. If it doesn’t, the user’s connection is funneled to a restricted virtual private LAN, where the user can make changes, or have changes made automatically, to ensure policy conformance before being redirected to the main network.

Differences can divide. Though the overall concepts are similar, the two companies are approaching the problem differently. With NAC, Cisco is trying to solve the entire problem itself, end to end. The company has developed its own security software agents through partnerships with three key antivirus providers–McAfee, Symantec and Trend Micro–and technology it had acquired through Okena. These “Trust Agents,” as Cisco calls them, will run on clients as well as Cisco networking gear, such as Ethernet switches, IP routers, and firewall products. The agents will communicate with each other through a central policy server to ensure that endpoints are updated and following policy before they connect to the network. “We felt it was important to deliver a solution that worked end to end,” said Bob Gleichauf, chief technology officer for Cisco’s security networking group. The fact that we are building a little agent to sit on clients is because networks extend all the way to the client.”

By contrast, Microsoft has opted to focus its NAP architecture on its core competencies: host and server software. Microsoft plans to incorporate security agents as part of its operating system software, so that every desktop and server running Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 will be wired for NAP. Microsoft’s current architecture does not include a networking element per se, but the company has partnered with a number of networking gear vendors so that they can hook into the NAP via a central server.

While Cisco has not signed up as a partner to NAP, several of its competitors already have, including Juniper Networks, Enterasys and Extreme Networks.

Open standards are key It will likely be customers that eventually force the two sides to work together, since both companies have a vested interest in selling their own security agents and Radius servers. A consortium of vendors called the Trusted Computing Group is already working on an architecture that will use open standards, so that customers can use Radius servers, security software or networking gear from any vendor. The group, which announced its plans in June, includes companies such as McAfee, Intel, Sygate, Juniper Networks, Hewlett-Packard and Sun Microsystems. Microsoft is a member of TCG, but Cisco is not. TCG supporters complain that though Cisco and Microsoft claim they are willing to work with partners, they seem to still be trying to keep pieces of their solutions proprietary to lock in customers to using their products. “Clearly Microsoft and Cisco would love for their architectures to dominate,” Scull said. “And by pushing their own solutions they ensure that customers continue to buy their products.”

For example, Cisco announced in June that it is expanding its antivirus partnership program to include more security vendors, but it did not mention opening its NAC architecture up to other networking competitors.

Even though Microsoft is creating a platform that more than 30 vendors can plug into, its NAP architecture only works in a pure Microsoft environment, which includes the client as well as a suite of back office servers.

http://news.com.com/Cisco%2C+Microsoft+in+security+showdown/2100-7355_3-5370427.html?tag=cd.lede

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Who spends what on computer security?

Posted on September 15, 2004December 30, 2021 by admini

According to the ninth annual Computer Security Institute/FBI Computer Crime and Security Survey, when asked about security spending as a percentage of their overall IT budget, nearly half of the 494 respondents pegged it at 1 to 5 percent, 15 percent put it at 6 to 10 percent, 8 percent indicated that security accounted for more than 10 percent of all IT expenditures, and 14 percent said they didn’t know.

Economies of scale allow larger companies to spend less per employee, while companies in certain industries (transportation, high tech, and telecommunications, as well as federal and state governments) spend far more heavily per employee than companies in the medical, retail, and manufacturing sectors, according to the ninth annual Computer Security Institute/FBI Computer Crime and Security Survey.

Asked about what metrics were applied to security spending, one-third of the respondents didn’t respond. Of the 320 that did respond, slightly more than half said security spending decisions were subject to ROI analysis, while the other half was split between net present value and internal rate of return.

Outsourcing of computer security has yet to take hold to any meaningful degree: nearly two-thirds of the respondents said they don’t outsource any aspect of security, and less than 1 percent said they outsource all of it. Slightly more than one-fourth of the respondents said they have signed on for some form of cybersecurity risk insurance.

http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/3193414?f=advancesearch

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Virus writers add network sniffer to worm

Posted on September 14, 2004December 30, 2021 by admini

So far there are no reports of SDBot-UH in the wild but the inclusion of selective network sniffing along with keystroke logging features and other backdoor capabilities has security researchers worried.

Sniffers are designed to monitor network traffic. They are widely used for network performance diagnostics but in this instance their function has been turned to malign purposes. Bundling a network sniffer with an auto-propagating worm makes it easier for hackers to harvest usernames and passwords than would otherwise be the case.

The sniffing capabilities of SDBot-UH worm focus on phrases associated with network logins and Paypal accounts. It also tries to steal the CD keys of games, according to an advisory by AV firm Trend Micro.

Patrick Nolan, a security researcher at the Internet Storm Center, warns: “If the Trojans described by Trend can successfully transmit the filter’s packet captures back to the owner, they are going to cause problems well beyond typical bot infestation issues.”

SDBot-UH uses a variety of well-known Microsoft exploits to spread. It also looks for weak usernames and passwords to gain access to target machines. Malicious sniffers can be difficult to detect but Netcraft points to a number of tools such as Sentinel and AntiSniff that can be used to detect sniffers on a network.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/09/14/network_sniffer_worm/

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Security downtime to triple

Posted on September 14, 2004December 30, 2021 by admini

According to analyst house Gartner, downtime linked to security problems will rise from five per cent to 15 per cent of all downtime, due to the influx of mobile working technologies and a growing dependence among businesses on the internet and web services. The analyst house has a degree of optimism for how future security will pan out.

John Pescatore, Gartner VP and research fellow, said in a statement that in the next few years changes to operating systems and hardware will help the security effort but in the meantime, IT staff will have to try and use “stopgap approaches to deal with new vulnerabilities associated with unsafe customer, employee and business partner platforms”.

Gartner advises that for companies building their own software, developers should be pushed to put security at the head of their list.

It’s not just in-house tech makers that need a word in their ears — the analysts suggest end users should give vendors grief about tightening up their security procedures too.

http://news.zdnet.co.uk/internet/security/0,39020375,39166536,00.htm

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Sun touts tougher security in Solaris 10

Posted on September 14, 2004December 30, 2021 by admini

Paul Sangster, senior Solaris security architect for the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company, touted Solaris 10’s security improvements during a roundtable discussion at Sun’s Burlington, Mass., offices Monday, saying, “Security touches everything we do, and in designing Solaris 10 we made the assumption that the Web server is sloppy” and in need of extra layers of protection. I expect IT administrators will greatly appreciate the N1 grid container zone feature and the user rights management privilege feature,” Sangster said. “These features enable (them) to much more tightly protect their services, even in the face of an attacker exploiting a known hole in some third-party software that was deployed but not yet patched.

He said the N1 grid container technology will allow users to create up to 4,000 secure, fault-isolated software partitions, each with its own IP address, memory space, file area, host name and root password.

Solaris 10 has been in development for two and a half years, and has slowly been made available to customers in recent months.

He added that Linux applications can run unmodified on Solaris.

Weinberg added that the capabilities in Trusted Solaris have been folded into Solaris 10. “Trusted Solaris has been used in government but has been separate from the standard Solaris,” he said. “We started this integration with Solaris 8, and Solaris 10 completes the move.”

James Dobson, system architect for Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H., talked about the success the institution’s psychology department has had in using a version of Solaris 10. Pointing to the operating system’s improved interoperability, Dobson said, “We use multiple applications and platforms and Solaris 10 is working smoothly with all of these.

http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/originalContent/0,289142,sid14_gci1005868,00.html

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Metrics Matter

Posted on September 10, 2004December 30, 2021 by admini

If you want your security organization to be supported (or at least tolerated) by management, the department must become a communication station. Avoid subjective interpretations or even anecdotal information; instead, focus on metrics that are objective and indisputable.

As an example, to calculate the impact of spam filtering, the team began counting e-mails the filter rejected. Despite a few user complaints, the metrics showed these were isolated incidents and proved that a great majority of legitimate mail was getting through. This correlation of traffic to outbreaks would later help the IT staff react faster to outbreaks, because they could see worm signs before it spread.

Most infrastructure metrics are designed for gearheads, and the data is not useful to business managers.

Start with the message you want to communicate to management, then figure out which metrics would support that point. A mix of good news and bad news is to be expected–any manager knows that an employee who communicates only great news is probably a liar. If your security reports are always full of sunshine, expect management to become suspicious–and with good reason.

For instance, clients who use desktop-management and antivirus software appreciate being able to perform a “check-in”–that is, every workstation on the network “phones home” to the master console, ensuring each is in compliance with policies, such as pattern updates. This type of report is a good indicator that (a) your software investment is functioning; (b) the majority of users haven’t cleverly disabled the agent so they can download porn and install cute screensavers; and (c) you can, if necessary, invoke additional software functionality.

Indeed, any process you monitor will show that you’re on top of things–particularly if the process is new to your organization, such as vulnerability remediation, server- configuration compliance, unsuccessful login monitoring or log-exception monitoring.

When you must express dollar figures, try to associate some measure of probability with them–IT security is equivalent to risk management, after all.

Ultimately, use caution and be conservative when estimating dollar payback or you risk damaging your credibility.

Finally, in security and in business, timing is everything.

http://www.securitypipeline.com/46200070

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