The Daily Incite - August 2, 2007
August 2, 2007 - Volume 2, #114
Good Morning:
I'm happy to say I survived Black Hat Day 1. Saw a few good sessions,
met up with some old friends and made some new ones. Given what seems
to be the significant growth of Black Hat, I figure I should provide
some tips that I've learned over the past two years on how to get the
most out of the show. So without further ado, here is Incite's top 5
list of things to bring to Black Hat:
- Comfortable
shoes - Do not forget comfortable shoes. You don't realize
how friggin' big Vegas is until you need to go between a few hotels for
a meeting or just between some of the session rooms. Some of my friends
were giving me some angst about wearing Crocs on Tuesday night, but at
least I was comfortable. Them in their alligator skin fancy footwear?
Not so much.
- Your liver
- Black Hat is all about the parties and some sessions too. Your liver
will get some exercise this week and if you are as out of drinking
shape as I am, it kind of hurts. The Mozilla folks tried to buck the
trend and have a milk and cookies party last night. I opted to skip
that because I can get milk and cookies at home. A bunch of V/Ts on
someone else's dime? Only in Vegas baby.
- Your brain
- Some of the sessions are technically deep and make you think. A lot.
Until your head hurts. I saw Ptacek, Lawson, and Ferries session on
virtualized hardware rootkits and they were talking about all sorts of
deep technical stuff. At least I think that's what they were talking
about. Also to set the
record straight, Thomas Ptacek would rather I not call him the "king of
security research marketing." Evidently it hurts his street cred. How
about the Goth Prince of security research marketing? Does that work
better for you man? I know you need to keep your jiggy on with your
home-boys.
- Your watch
- The Black Hat sessions fill up. Fast. So unless you want to sit on
the floor for 75 minutes, get there a few minutes early and get a
seat.
- A translator - Much of the security research happening now is being done outside of the US. Security truly plays on a global stage. Unfortunately that does create some language barriers when non-English speaking researchers present their findings in their native tongues. Or is that English? Given the size and scope of Black Hat and the depth of technical information being presented, I think CMP should get translators for the sessions where presenters have weak English skills. That may make them stop the cash printing presses for a minute or two, but it would really improve the experience on both sides.
And I shouldn't forget to tell you about what you SHOULD
forget, and that's your WiFi card. Just turn it off when you get to
Vegas. A researcher friend was a bit upset that not enough people were
using WiFi in the hotel and it was impacting his data collection
efforts. If you use WiFi, they are going to try to hack you at Black
Hat and moreso at DEFCON. I am loving my EVDO service now, as I can
surf the web at
Black Hat and not fear for the life of my computer.
That's until they break EVDO. But that's probably a topic at next
year's Black Hat. Have a great weekend.
Technorati: Information
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Top Security News
Ajax-ulation?
Gross.
So what? -
One of the sessions that I missed was Billy Hoffman's Premature
Ajax-ulation, where he and Bryan Sullivan went into the issues around
Ajax-based Web apps and how you can break them. A bunch of folks I know
went to the session and said it was the best one of the day. InformationWeek's Larry Greenemeier was
there and covered the session. Given the fact that no one is
rolling out non-Ajax web stuff anymore, the session was both impactful
and timely. Now get a towel and clean up that mess.
Link to this
SOA
security starting to get attention
So what? -
A session I did make it to was Brad Hill's Attacking Web Services
security. He presented a good overview of the problem, but then made
his contention that the best approach to securing Web services was to
default back to SSL, as opposed to any of the message-oriented security
approaches (namely WS-Security). He did make the point effectively that
WS-Security is pretty complicated. SSL certainly is easier, although I
wouldn't say issuing client-side certificates everywhere is a walk in
the park. The reality is that it's too early to tell if Brad is right
or wrong. We are first getting our arms around what SOA is and how it
needs to be secured. I found this pretty detailed primer on SOA
Security over at Dark Reading. It also does a good job of
outlining the issue and discussing some of the standards uncertainty,
but without bringing along the SSL Kool-Aid.
Link to this
VARs jump on the NAC bandwagon?
So what? -
It's funny how the hype cycles ebb and flow in this business. A week
ago I made a comment about how people aren't really talking that much
about NAC and then for the last two weeks I've seen a ton of stuff
about NAC. According to CRN, NAC presents a great
opportunity for VARs. Well, yes and no. Since customers
continue to be confused about what NAC is, there is clearly the
opportunity to help them understand the technology and where it
can/should fit in the customer's environment. The article also
correctly points out that NAC spans a lot of different skill set,
including desktop management. Yet with 30-40 vendors all trying to
position NAC solutions, VARs must select their manufacturers carefully.
There will be a shake-out (Caymas anyone?) and a lot of VARs and their
customers will be left holding the bag.
Link to this
The Laundry List
- What about Super Glue? Dave Jevans finally unveils his new shop, IronKey. A really secure USB thumb drive. Seems like a very narrow niche. - IronKey release
- VoIP broken? Not a surprise, but how big a deal is it? Maybe they can steal the grocery list the Boss is giving me right now. - Forbes Black Hat coverage
Top Blog Postings
My
take on the WSJ Top 10 article
It seems everyone and their mother and maybe even Grandma is weighing
in on the very controversial Top 10 ways to get around your
organization's security article. Beau Woods' write up is really
good. As is Loner Vamp's. But I want to make
sure we don't miss the point, which is the continued need to educate
our users as to why these defenses are important and what we are
protecting them from. The reason people will try to go around our
defenses is
because they don't understand the importance of adhering to the rules.
Sure the WSJ was borderline irresponsible in publishing this, but it's
not like a quick search wouldn't yield roughly the same information. If
you do a crappy job of selling the reasons why the policies need to be
followed, then you shouldn't be surprised that users go around you.
Remember that it's easy to be Dr. No. It's much harder, but ultimately
more important to be Mr. (or Ms.) Yes, But.
http://beauwoods.blogspot.com/2007/07/at-least-ten-things-wsj-got-wrong.html
Link
to this
Data encryption not the panacea
Tom Olzak makes a great point in this post about data encryption. There
is a time and place for crypto, but everywhere for everything is not
it. Besides the cost and overhead, it's just not practical. That being
said, we do need to figure out how to get to a more data-centric
security posture. Maybe that will give Rob Newby a chance to smile and
not be so grumpy today. For certain data types, encryption does make
sense - but be wary of the cost of ownership and make sure you are
doing crypto because it's the best way to solve the problem, not just
that an auditor told you to encrypt some data. And as Tom says, make
sure you really need to actually store that sensitive data.
http://blogs.ittoolbox.com/security/adventures/archives/again-data-encryption-is-not-a-cureall-17990
Link
to this
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