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IS 2620: Developing Secure Systems

This presentation covers the fundamentals of cloud computing, including its origin and definition, essential characteristics, service models, deployment models, and security challenges. It also discusses key security components and advantages of cloud provisioning, data storage, processing infrastructure, and network and perimeter security.

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IS 2620: Developing Secure Systems

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  1. IS 2620 IS 2620: Developing Secure Systems The Cloud Computing Paradigm Part of slides are taken from “Effectively and Securely Using the Cloud Computing Paradigm” by Peter Mell and Tim Grance from NIST 2/16/2012

  2. Agenda Understanding Cloud Computing Cloud Computing Security Secure Cloud Migration Paths Foundational Elements of Cloud Computing Security & Privacy Challenges Policy Management

  3. Understanding Cloud Computing

  4. Origin of the term “Cloud Computing” “Comes from the early days of the Internet where we drew the network as a cloud… we didn’t care where the messages went… the cloud hid it from us” – Kevin Marks, Google First cloud around networking (TCP/IP abstraction) Second cloud around documents (WWW data abstraction) The emerging cloud abstracts infrastructure complexities of servers, applications, data, and heterogeneous platforms (“muck” as Amazon’s CEO Jeff Bezos calls it)

  5. A Working Definition of Cloud Computing Cloud computing is a model for enabling convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources (e.g., networks, servers, storage, applications, and services) that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction. This cloud model promotes availability and is composed of five essential characteristics, three service models, and four deployment models.

  6. Essential Cloud Characteristics • On-demand self-service • Get computing capabilities as needed automatically • Broad network access • Services available over the net using desktop, laptop, PDA, mobile phone

  7. Essential Cloud Characteristics (Cont.) • Resource pooling • Location independence • Provider resources pooled to server multiple clients • Rapid elasticity • Ability to quickly scale in/out service • Measured service • control, optimize services based on metering

  8. Cloud Service Models • Cloud Software as a Service (SaaS) • Use provider’s applications over a network • User doesn’t manage or control the network, servers, OS, storage or applications • Cloud Platform as a Service (PaaS) • Users deploy their applications on a cloud • Users control their apps • Users don’t manage servers, IS, storage

  9. Cloud Service Models (Cont.) • Cloud Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) • Rent processing, storage, network capacity, and other fundamental computing resources • Consumers gets access to the infrastructure to deploy their stuff • Don’t manage or control the infrastructure • Do manage or control the OS, storage, apps, selected network components • To be considered “cloud” they must be deployed on top of cloud infrastructure that has the key characteristics

  10. Service Model Architectures

  11. Cloud Deployment Models • Private cloud • single org only, • managed by the org or a 3rd party, • on or off premise • Community cloud • shared infrastructure for specific community • several orgs that have shared concerns, • managed by org or a 3rd party

  12. Cloud Deployment Models (Cont.) • Public cloud • Sold to the public, mega-scale infrastructure • available to the general public • Hybrid cloud • composition of two or more clouds • bound by standard or proprietary technology

  13. Common Cloud Characteristics • Cloud computing often leverages: • Massive scale • Homogeneity • Virtualization • Resilient computing • Low cost software • Geographic distribution • Service orientation • Advanced security technologies

  14. The NIST Cloud Definition Framework Hybrid Clouds Deployment Models Community Cloud Public Cloud Service Models Private Cloud Essential Characteristics Software as a Service (SaaS) Platform as a Service (PaaS) Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) On Demand Self-Service Massive Scale Resilient Computing Broad Network Access Rapid Elasticity Homogeneity Geographic Distribution Common Characteristics Virtualization Service Orientation Resource Pooling Measured Service Low Cost Software Advanced Security

  15. Cloud Computing Security

  16. Security is the Major Issue

  17. General Security Advantages • Shifting public data to a external cloud reduces the exposure of the internal sensitive data • Cloud homogeneity makes security auditing/testing simpler • Clouds enable automated security management • Redundancy / Disaster Recovery

  18. General Security Challenges • Trusting vendor’s security model • Customer inability to respond to audit findings • Obtaining support for investigations • Indirect administrator accountability • Proprietary implementations can’t be examined • Loss of physical control

  19. Security Relevant Cloud Components • Cloud Provisioning Services • Cloud Data Storage Services • Cloud Processing Infrastructure • Cloud Support Services • Cloud Network and Perimeter Security • Elastic Elements: Storage, Processing, and Virtual Networks

  20. Provisioning Service • Advantages • Rapid reconstitution of services • Enables availability • Provision in multiple data centers / multiple instances • Advanced honey net capabilities • Challenges • Impact of compromising the provisioning service

  21. Data Storage Services • Advantages • Data fragmentation and dispersal • Automated replication • Provision of data zones (e.g., by country) • Encryption at rest and in transit • Automated data retention • Challenges • Isolation management / data multi-tenancy • Storage controller • Single point of failure / compromise? • Exposure of data to foreign governments

  22. Cloud Processing Infrastructure • Advantages • Ability to secure masters and push out secure images • Challenges • Application multi-tenancy • Reliance on hypervisors • Process isolation / Application sandboxes

  23. Cloud Support Services • Advantages • On demand security controls (e.g., authentication, logging, firewalls…) • Challenges • Additional risk when integrated with customer applications • Needs certification and accreditation as a separate application • Code updates

  24. Cloud Network and Perimeter Security • Advantages • Distributed denial of service protection • VLAN capabilities • Perimeter security (IDS, firewall, authentication) • Challenges • Virtual zoning with application mobility

  25. Cloud Security Advantages • Data Fragmentation and Dispersal • Dedicated Security Team • Greater Investment in Security Infrastructure • Fault Tolerance and Reliability • Greater Resiliency • Hypervisor Protection Against Network Attacks • Possible Reduction of C&A Activities (Access to Pre-Accredited Clouds)

  26. Cloud Security Advantages (Cont.) • Simplification of Compliance Analysis • Data Held by Unbiased Party (cloud vendor assertion) • Low-Cost Disaster Recovery and Data Storage Solutions • On-Demand Security Controls • Real-Time Detection of System Tampering • Rapid Re-Constitution of Services • Advanced Honeynet Capabilities

  27. Cloud Security Challenges • Data dispersal and international privacy laws • EU Data Protection Directive and U.S. Safe Harbor program • Exposure of data to foreign government and data subpoenas • Data retention issues • Need for isolation management • Multi-tenancy • Logging challenges • Data ownership issues • Quality of service guarantees

  28. Cloud Security Challenges (Cont.) • Dependence on secure hypervisors • Attraction to hackers (high value target) • Security of virtual OSs in the cloud • Possibility for massive outages • Encryption needs for cloud computing • Encrypting access to the cloud resource control interface • Encrypting administrative access to OS instances • Encrypting access to applications • Encrypting application data at rest • Public cloud vs internal cloud security • Lack of public SaaS version control

  29. Obstacles & Opportunities

  30. Unique Features • Outsourcing Data and Applications • Extensibility and Shared Responsibility • Multi-tenancy • Service-Level Agreements • Virtualization and Hypervisors • Heterogeneity • Compliance and Regulations

  31. Security Implications

  32. Security and Privacy Challenges • Authentication and Identity Management • interoperability • password-based: inherited limitation • How multi-tenancy can affect the privacy of identity information isn’t yet well understood. • multi-jurisdiction issue • integrated with other security components.

  33. Security and Privacy Challenges • Access Control and Accounting • Heterogeneity and diversity of services, as well as the domains’ diverse access requirements • capture dynamic, context, or attribute- or credential-based access requirements • integrate privacy-protection requirements • interoperability • capture relevant aspects of SLAs

  34. Security and Privacy Challenges • Trust Management and Policy Integration • compose multiple services to enable bigger application services • efficiently capturing a generic set of parameters required for establishing trust and to manage evolving trust and interaction/sharing requirements • address challenges such as semantic heterogeneity, secure interoperability, and policy-evolution management.

  35. Security and Privacy Challenges • Secure-Service Management • WSDL can’t fully meet the requirements of cloud computing services description • issues such as quality of service, price, and SLAs • automatic and systematic service provisioning and composition framework that considers security and privacy issues

  36. Security and Privacy Challenges • Privacy and Data Protection • storing data and applications on systems that reside outside of on-premise datacenters • shared infrastructure, risk of potential unauthorized access and exposure. • Privacy-protection mechanisms must be embedded in all security solutions. • Provenance • Balancing between data provenance and privacy

  37. Security and Privacy Challenges • Organizational Security Management • shared governance can become a significant issue if not properly addressed • Dependence on external entities • the possibility of an insider threat is significantly extended when outsourcing data and processes to clouds.

  38. Security and Privacy Approaches • Authentication and Identity Management • User-centric IDM • users control their digital identities and takes away the complexity of IDM from the enterprises • federated IDM solutions • privacy-preserving protocols to verify various identity attributes by using, for example, zero-knowledge proof-based techniques

  39. Security and Privacy Approaches • Access Control Needs • RBAC • policy-integration needs • credential-based RBAC, GTRBAC,8 location-based RBAC

  40. Security and Privacy Approaches • Secure Interoperation • Multi-domain • centralized approach • decentralized approaches • specification frameworks to ensure that the cross-domain accesses are properly specified, verified, and enforced • Policy engineering mechanisms

  41. Security and Privacy Approaches • Secure-Service Provisioning and Composition • Open Services Gateway Initiative (OSGi) • Declarative OWL-based language can be used to provide a service definition manifest, including a list of distinct component types that make up the service, functional requirements, component grouping and topology instructions

  42. Security and Privacy Approaches • Trust Management Framework • trust-based policy integration • Delegation • must be incorporated in service composition framework

  43. Security and Privacy Approaches • Data-Centric Security and Privacy • shifts data protection from systems and applications • documents must be self-describing and defending regardless of their environments.

  44. Security and Privacy Approaches • Managing Semantic Heterogeneity • semantic heterogeneity among policies • Use of an ontology is the most promising approach • policy framework and a policy enforcement architecture • inference engines

  45. Policy Management • No single access control mechanism, single policy language or single policy management tool • diverse access control solutions • policies may be composed in incompatible ways • Heterogeneity and distribution of policies pose problems in administration

  46. Case Study Implementation • Investigation • Authentication mechanism • How users can share resources with other users • privacy/access setting options it provides • policy language and mechanism it uses. • What APIs it provides. • change privacy settings using an API or in some other ways. • discover users' resources • supports XACML or similar technologies.

  47. Case Study Implementation • Amazon S3, Dropbox, LinkedIn, Flickr, and Twitter • developed a unified framework

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