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Entering the Security Arena

Entering the Security Arena. Richard Bejtlich / rbejtlich@saball.com Senior Engineer Managed Network Security Opertations Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. San Antonio, TX 24 Oct 01. Introduction. Bejtlich = 'bate-lik"

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Entering the Security Arena

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  1. Entering the Security Arena • Richard Bejtlich / rbejtlich@saball.com • Senior Engineer • Managed Network Security Opertations • Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. • San Antonio, TX • 24 Oct 01

  2. Introduction • Bejtlich = 'bate-lik" • Senior engineer for managed network security operations, BATC (2001-) • Former captain at US Air Force Computer Emergency Response Team (1998-2001) • Student of network-based intrusion detection, computer forensics • http://bejtlich.net

  3. Outline • Philosophy • Planning • Prevention • Detection • Response • Personnel development • Thank you to Dreamworks LLC and Universal Studios for Gladiator photos

  4. Philosophy How can we best defend the empire against the barbarians of the North?

  5. Philosophy • What is security? • Preservation of confidentiality, integrity, and availability of an organization's resources • Why does security matter? • Owners must trust their resources to do business • Customers avoid organizations they don't trust • Regulators disallow business without safeguards

  6. Philosophy • How can security be achieved? • Plan by developing a security policy • Prevent exploitation where possible • Detect exploitation when it happens • React to exploitation, then resume operations • Constantly assess the tools and processes implementing these steps • Ensure your people are qualified

  7. Planning Who wants to write a security policy? Anyone? Anyone?

  8. Planning • Security cannot be achieved without policy • Written policy recommended, but not always needed in small, simple operations • Without a written policy, it is difficult to enforce your security objectives • Every computing resource is a manifestation of your security policy

  9. Planning • What should a security policy discuss? • Acceptable use of resources (CPU, bandwidth) • Allow peer-to-peer (Gnutella, Napster), chat (IRC, AIM), remote control (VNC, pcAnywhere)? • Prohibitions on installing software, especially tools which may be used to escalate privileges • No reasonable expectation of privacy • If management doesn't agree, forget it

  10. Planning • Minimum preparation for incident response • System administrator contact list; include names, titles, and numbers for home/cell phones • Network provider contact list • Management contact list (include PR and legal) • Agree upon response prior to compromise • Pursue and monitor with law enforcement help? • Recover, secure, and press on?

  11. Planning • Back-ups can save the day • Copying critical files to tape, Zip, Jazz, CD-R • Hard copies may be warranted • Redundancy helps preserve availability • Network connectivity (separate ISPs) • Electricity (Uninterruptable Power Supplies) • Hot spares (web servers, network devices)

  12. Prevention Sire, let me show you the latest offering from our security vendors.

  13. Prevention • Prevention is continous implemention of processes and tools to preserve security • Prevention relies upon understanding user and customer needs • Prevention demands appreciation of capabilities and intentions of intruders • Balancing user needs vs. threats is key

  14. Prevention • What exactly must be prevented? • Confidentiality: exposure of information and resources to unauthorized parties • Integrity: manipulation of information and resources by unauthorized parties • Availability: preservation of ability of authorized parties to access information and resources

  15. Prevention • Who constitutes the threat? • Disgruntled, curious, and former users • Competitors collecting business intelligence • Foreign intelligence services • Pranksters • Technologically literate activists • Forces of nature

  16. Prevention • Risk = vulnerability X threat X recovery cost • A new vulnerability for Windows 2000 appears: you run Solaris, so vulnerability is zero • A new vulnerability for Windows 2000 appears: no one knows how to exploit it, so threat is zero • It takes zero effort to resume operations after compromise: recovery cost is zero • Taken collectively, risk is generally not zero

  17. Prevention • Core principles • Grant users the least amount of privilege necessary to perform their work • Implement multiple, independent levels of defense which do not "fail open" • Learn of new vulnerabilities and apply countermeasures in a timely manner • Prevent what you can and detect everything else

  18. Prevention • Core technologies • Screening/filtering routers • Firewalls • Virtual Private Networks • Authentication services • Anti-virus applications • Technology is only as useful as the operator who configures and uses it

  19. Detection We detect clouds over Rome. Does this augur a dark future?

  20. Detection • Prevention will never be 100% successful • Ignorance is not bliss. Ignorance causes: • Systematic, long-term compromise • Subtle manipulation of information for evil means • Complete loss of confidence by users, customers • Legal and financial losses in many cases • Detection is not optional. How one performs detection is the question.

  21. Detection • Detection should be implemented in layers, as prevention is. Detect at these locations: • Network perimeter • Demilitarized zone • Bastion hosts • Critical internal hosts • User workstations, if managable • Remote locations (e.g., home laptops)

  22. Detection • Detection methodology • Baseline your systems processes. Know what services should be active on each. • Baseline your network traffic. Recognize normal internal and external patterns of use. • Implement processes and tools to detect deviations from these baselines. • Devote resources to these processes and tools

  23. Detection • Detection technologies • Router and firewall logs • Network-based intrusion detection systems • Host-based intrusion detection systems • Anti-virus software • Personal workstation intrusion detection systems • Network traffic profiling software • Human brains

  24. Detection • Challenges to detection • Staying current with attack methods and tools • Numerous vulnerabilities discovered each week • Intruders constantly devise ways to evade standard detection methods • Do-it-yourself sensors are difficult to use • Staffing sufficient numbers of appropriately trained and compensated personnel

  25. Response This is how WE deal with compromise, pal!

  26. Response • Don't panic! Implement your plan. • Contact response personnel by phone, not email • Contain the intruder by isolating the victim host • Decide if you want to recover or pursue • If recovering: determine method of compromise, patch exploited system, then return to service • If pursuing: augment detection, refine isolation, then return to service until objectives satisfied

  27. Response • Response considerations • System administrators may have more latitude for collection than law enforcement • Reporting incidents to law enforcement helps the community at large and shows you treat exploitation seriously • Evidence collected for prosecution must withstand intense scrutiny by defense lawyers

  28. Personnel Development We shall assemble a force to be reckoned with. Whom shall test our defenses?

  29. Personnel Development • Your security is only as sound as the personnel planning and implementing your prevention, detection, and response • UNIX administrators are not comfortable with Windows environments, and vice versa • Training is a retention device, not a way for employees to learn-and-leave • Lack of training = organizational suicide

  30. Personnel Development • Reputable training mechanisms: • Books: "My Picks" at http://bejtlich.net • Conferences: http://www.sans.org • Certifications: CISSP at http://www.isc2.org • Mentoring and in-house programs • Beware false prophets!

  31. Conclusion I declare victory over the network intruders!

  32. Conclusion • Security is a never-ending journey • Any positive steps are better than nothing • A small amount of effort can eliminate 80% of your vulnerabilities • A moderate amount of effort can eliminate 90% • A huge effort can eliminate 95% • Nothing can eliminate the remaining 5%

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