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Vaune Carr, Principal Consultant, BT Global Services

Rob Jamison, Manager, Network Intelligence, Managed Security Solutions Group, BT Global Services

Jill Knesek, Chief Security Officer, BT Global Services

Sushila Nair, Product Manager, Managed Security Solutions Group, BT Global Services

Ben Rothke, Senior Security Consultant, BT Global Services

Pete Russo, Senior Marketing Manager, BT Global Services

Bruce Schneier, Chief Security Technology Officer, BT Global Services

Ray Stanton, Global Head of BT’s Business Continuity, Security & Governance Customer Capability Unit

Jim Tiller, Vice President, Security Professional Services, North America, BT Global Services

Toby Weir-Jones, Vice President of Product Development, Managed Security Solutions Group, BT Global Services

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Posts tagged Breach Security

Friday, March 5, 2010

Past the Point of PCI

By:   Sushila Nair, Product Manager, Managed Security Solutions Group, 

               BT MSSG      & 

          Sanjay Mehta, Senior Vice President, Breach Security

The nirvana of that moment in time when you are completely secure without a single vulnerability in sight is unfeasible and, even if it were possible, it would be fleeting.  Despite our fondest wishes for this moment, we accept the fact that our networks are vulnerable and are in a constant state of flux, causing the vulnerabilities to alter and the risks to change.  Organizations struggle with how to continue to develop their core business while managing their risk and doing it all with fewer people and resources than they had last year.  The only way this is possible is to work smarter – but how does that translate into practice?

We accept that our security is flawed, so it becomes critical that we place security devices wherever we have high or unacceptable risk.  It is essential that the security alerts from security products like WAFS, firewalls, IDS/IPS as well as host information and application logs are centralized.  The devices we select are critical and should be chosen in line with risk.  It is worth bearing in mind that web applications are one of our largest areas of risk and were one of the key areas of focus in PCI DSS 1.2 which was based on the forensics of card breaches.

Once the devices are selected, then the complexity of managing this new technology comes into place and again, outsourcing is a serious option for companies that are constrained by head count.  The footprints of what has happened on our network is in our log files, and it’s impossible to check the multitude of consoles for the vast array of product that we have, so it is critical we centralize our log files and have the capability to correlate and look for patterns of attacks.  Unfortunately, security breaches are not limited to 9 to 5 or business hours, so our security monitoring framework must be built to take this intelligence, look for patterns of attacks and be manned 24×7.

This week’s RSA Conference pinpointed the problem of treating compliance as a single point in time. 

Most companies breathe a sigh of relief once PCI compliance is “achieved” via an audit or code review.  IT professionals move on to the next priority, and often, compliance “maintenance” is forgotten.  In doing so, they fail to understand that audits and code reviews are outdated the moment they are completed.  Web applications continue to be developed and altered, and as a result, continued compliance can’t be ensured with the “one-time look” that occurs with audits and code reviews.  And it would certainly be cost-prohibitive to conduct an audit or review with each application change.

Fortunately, continuous PCI compliance can be achieved using a web application security solution that provides real-time, continuous security for all protected web applications. 

In today’s compliance landscape, it’s simply not enough to know that a problem exists.  Sophisticated web application security solutions help companies mitigate problems.  Organizations need to have a real-time solution – not just a single look in time – to be truly secure and PCI compliant.

Here is more information on how vulnerability scans and code reviews compare to web application firewalls:

Vulnerability Scans and
Code Reviews
VS. Web Application Firewalls
Looks at one web application at a single point in time. Provides real-time, continuous security for all protected web applications.
 

Must be repeated for each application change.

 

Profiles each application’s acceptable behavior and automatically learns changes.

 

May not cover every line of code.

 

Secures the entire web application.

 

Can result in inconsistent findings due to vendor interpretations.

 

Provides factual information on vulnerabilities.

 

Does not fix vulnerabilities that are found.

 

Serves as a “virtual patch” that protects each application’s vulnerabilities.

 

Is expensive.

 

Offers immediate ROI.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Guest Post: Our Future in the Cloud

By Sanjay Mehta, senior vice president of Breach Security

Cloud computing is a hot topic at this week’s RSA Security Conference in San Francisco.  The amount of time the conference has designated to discuss, explore and debate the numerous security issues surrounding cloud computing is proof positive that more business – and supporting technologies – are taking place in the cloud.

But as more business technologies utilize cloud computing, new opportunities have emerged for hackers and cyber criminals to exploit vulnerabilities and profit from business applications using outdated security solutions for protection.  In short, the evolution of business technologies using cloud computing means that security solutions must follow suit – now.

Rapidly changing security needs require the benefits and advantages that Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) and cloud computing provides.  Security providers that don’t leverage cloud technology are quickly becoming antiquated as all technology – business and security – moves into the cloud.

Using SaaS or cloud computing provides security technology with distinct technological advantages, such as making security updates and code changes instantly available to clients.  In addition, new security technology needs to be developed specifically for the protection of business conducted in the cloud.  The technology landscape has changed and security needs to keep up by including cloud security needs and requirements at the forefront of the development process.

Breach Security is working with partners, such as Akamai, to provide web application security in the cloud.  For example, when deployed with Akamai’s Web Application Firewall service, Breach’s WebDefend Global Event Manager is the first web application security management solution to defend against global application security threats by enabling customers to make distributed cloud and data center defense-in-depth architectures operational.

Breach and Akamai are guarding their clients against security threats in the cloud.  Are you protected?

Sanjay Mehta has more than a decade of experience driving revenue growth and strategic business opportunities at Internet security and technology companies. As Senior Vice President, he is responsible for overseeing Breach Security’s go-to-market strategy, expanding the company’s channel and maintaining and growing its existing customer base.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Guest Post: We’ve been blind to attacks on our websites

Ryan Barnett, Director of Application Security Research at Breach Security

SQL injection attacks are the No. 1 cause of data loss according to the 2009 Data Breach Investigations Report by Verizon. The report points directly to secure coding in PCI DSS and the need for code review or web application firewalls (WAFs).  While SQL injection attacks are often detected incorrectly by IDS/IPS, specialist application monitoring presented within a WAF gives far better accuracy with detecting application layer attacks.  

 

To shed more light on web application firewall technology, we have asked our technology partners at Breach Security to offer their insights.  Here’s what Ryan Barnett, Director of Application Security Research at Breach Security, has to say:

 

There was an interesting article on Computerworld’s website entitled, “We’ve been blind to attacks on our Web sites.”  The article drives home an important use-case for WAFs – visibility of web traffic. Too many people get caught up in the “block attacks with a WAF” mentality that they forget about the insight that can be gained by simply having full access to the inbound request and response data.  From the article:

Of course, as the security manager, I can’t afford a false sense of security, so I recently took some steps to find out just what was going on within our Web servers’ network traffic.  And it turns out that many attacks have been getting through our firewalls undetected.  We’ll never know how long this has been going on.

                         — Computerworld, J.F. Rice, “We’ve been blind to attacks on our Web sites” (June 23, 2009)

This is a typical first reaction.  Most of today’s network firewalls have some sort of Deep Packet Inspection capabilities.  However, most people don’t use it due to performance hits.  The firewalls are mainly geared towards whether to allow a connection based on the source destination IPs and Port combos instead of the actual application payloads.  This is somewhat like when you use the telephone to call someone.  A firewall would just check to see if you are allowed to call that phone number, but it doesn’t usually look at what you are saying in the conversation once you are connected.

The other big hindrance to inspecting web traffic at a network firewall is SSL.  You have to be able to decrypt the layer 7 data in order to inspect it.

My company’s front-end Web servers, which directly receive connections from the Internet through our firewalls, are definitely a hot spot in our network.  The firewalls and IDS allow us to see some of what’s going on, but can they really detect active content-based attacks?  To find out, I installed a Web application firewall in my company’s DMZ to tell us about active attacks that may not be identified by our other devices.  I set the device up in monitor mode, though it can be set up to block attacks, because my goal was just to see what was going on.  I wanted to know more about what’s inside the connections to those Web servers.

           Computerworld, J.F. Rice, “We’ve been blind to attacks on our Web sites” (June 23, 2009)

 

The WAF can initially be deployed for detection only or monitoring mode to allow for visibility.

What I discovered is that our Web sites are being “scraped” by other companies — our competitors!  Some of the information on our sites is valuable intellectual property.  It is provided online, in a restricted manner (passwords and such), to our customers.  Such restrictions aren’t very difficult to overcome for the Web crawlers that our competitors are using, because webmasters usually don’t know much about security.  They make a token attempt to put passwords and restrictions on sensitive files, but they often don’t do a very good job.

            — Computerworld, J.F. Rice, “We’ve been blind to attacks on our Web sites” (June 23, 2009)

 

Scraping attacks that are executed by legitimate users and aim to siphon off large amounts of data are a serious threat to many organizations.  These types of attacks cannot be identified by signature based rules as there is no overt malicious behavior to identify if only one individual transaction is inspected.  Behavioral analysis needs to be employed to correlate multiple transactions over a specified time period to see if there is an excessive rate being used.  Anti-automation defenses are critical.

Our Web application firewall found some other problems as well.  We experience hundreds of SQL injection attack attempts every day.  So far, none has been successful, but I’m amazed at the sheer volume.  I can’t imagine anyone having the time to sit around trying SQL injection attacks against random Web servers, so I have to assume that these attacks are coming from automated scripts.  In any case, they are textbook examples of SQL injection, each one walking through various combinations of SQL code embedded in HTML.  It looks like we’ve done a good job of securing our Web applications against these attacks, but it’s always a little disconcerting to hear invaders pounding on the door.

                        — Computerworld, J.F. Rice, “We’ve been blind to attacks on our Web sites” (June 23, 2009)

Having visibility into the types of automated attacks launched against a web application provides two key pieces of data:

  1. Understanding of the Threat component of the Risk equation – There are many academic types of debates and discussions that happen early on in the development of software.  One of the more challenging aspects to quantify is the threat.  Is there really anyone out there targeting our sites?  Where are they coming from?  What attacks are they launching?  Without this type of confirmed data obtained from the production network, it is difficult to accurately do threat modeling.

 

  1. Validation of secure coding practices – It will become evident very quickly whether or not the web application is vulnerable to these types of injection attacks.  If the application does not implement proper input validation mechanisms, then there is a possibility that the injected code will be executed and the application will respond abnormally.  By inspecting both the inbound request and the outbound response, it is possible to confirm if/when/where input validation is faltering.

BT’s Managed Security Solutions Group is the first global MSSP to work with Breach Security’s WebDefend to ensure that application attacks detected by the WAF can flow into a central security monitoring framework while providing the maximum amount of intelligence to SOC engineers to ensure state of the art monitoring.  Most customers struggle with increasing number of management consoles and alerting frameworks.  The capability to plug web defend into a central framework enables organizations to have the benefit of 24×7x365 monitoring.

http://www.verizonbusiness.com/resources/security/reports/2009_databreach_rp.pdf

http://www.breach.com/

http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/340216/We_ve_Been_Blind_to_Attacks_on_Our_Sites

http://www.breach.com/news-events/press-releases/2009-10-06_WebDefend4.html

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