The Daily Incite - June 24, 2008
June 24, 2008 - Volume 3, #59
Good Morning:
As I've mentioned, this is the summer of concerts for me. Though it
should be really called the "Champions Tour," because it seems every
act I'm going to see is over 50. Right, just like the golf tour - but
it seems the purses keep going up in the music business. No wonder I
heard on the radio yesterday that the Stones are thinking about another
world tour. And if the rumors of a Zeppelin world tour come to fruition
- I'll be there.

Welcome to the new music business, which is fine. Even if the record
labels aren't adapting fast enough, it's good to see the artists
evolving and making sure they can still live the life depicted in
Nickelback's "Rock Star" song. It must be nice.
I mean even the New Kids on the Block are back together and touring.
Sorry, but I'll be passing on that show, but they are able to fill
10,000 seats. Which is horrifying, but whatever? The NKOTB fans
probably think I'm crazy for going to see bands like Steely Dan and
Boston.
Or R.E.M. The Boss and I went to see Atlanta's own hometown rock band
on Saturday night. And that's what I want to rant about today. I'm sure
out of the 12,000 or so folks at the show, the 10 most rude happened to
be seated right next to us. Arghhh.
First up is the talking. I just love those people that go to a show and
proceed to talk about their nails or their goiters or whatever. But
since they are at a ROCK CONCERT, they have to scream at the top of
their lungs to be heard. Well guess what? That means everyone around
them also gets to hear about their goiters. Thankfully the Boss is a
tough broad, and she just gets right up into the grills of these folks
and tells them to talk after the show.
Then there is the smoking. Evidently empirical evidence that smoking
KILLS you means nothing to these folks. Maybe it's the rebellious
stage, but when you see a 50-something smoking away, you hope they
carry decent life insurance. Actually, I don't hope because I don't
care what they do. But they are kind enough to share their second hand
smoke with me for the entire show. Arghhh.
Of course, we can't forget about the drunk ass that leaves his seat
every 15 minutes to get another big draft beer. Listen, I'm the last
guy to come down on someone for being a drunk ass, but I try my best
not to spill 75% of my draft before I get back to my seat. Yes,
watching a show isn't as comfortable when you are drenched with someone
else's nasty beer.
I'm sure I could go on all day, but what's the point of that? I guess
my only choice is to laugh. It's not like I'm going to stop going to
shows. So that means I'll need to deal with the talkers and smokers and
drunk asses. And I'll like it.
Have a great day.
Photo: "Shut
Up!"
originally uploaded
by Camps
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Mike, Internet
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Top Security News
How good do we think we are?
So what? -
I know a lot of security folks, and I don't know too many that think
they are actually "secure." Most know exactly where they could be
killed and how, but they either don't have the budget, resources or
executive mandate to fix the issues. So when I see a survey (commissioned by CDW) that shows IT
has an inflated view of their security posture - I wonder who
they are talking to. I really hope they are not confusing ignorance for
arrogance. I do know a lot of IT folks (who tend to wear security as
one
of their many hats) who don't know any better, so they say they are
pretty secure. They haven't had a system cratering event lately, so
they
must be doing OK. Well we know the truth and it's probably not OK.
Though there were a couple of other interesting tidbits in here. The
first is 77% of IT people figure their users think security systems are
"easy to use." I guarantee you they've never asked that specific
question. Doing a security perception audit one of the things I
recommend in the P-CSO, and a great majority of the
folks working
through the program hadn't ever done that. Second was that the
incessant security marketing mantra of the insider threat is working.
Most IT people are most concerned about insider risks. But overall, I
suspect this survey is worth little more than the paper it's written
on. If you ask dummies about how dumb they are, they very rarely admit
they don't know much of anything.
Link to this
Two years and counting for NAC
vendors
So what? -
It seems the Big G now figures that NAC startups have two years before they are
"flattened" by Cisco and Microsoft. Hmmm. Basically, their
thinking is that a large portion of their client base (large
enterprises) are predominately Cisco and Microsoft, so if you wait long
enough the big vendors will stop screwing it up and close off the
market
for everyone else. I'm not one to look for shades of gray, but in this
case the world really isn't so black and white. First of all, we need
to separate out the NAC client vs. the NAC infrastructure, which is
really the network infrastructure. Microsoft will dominate the NAC
client. In fact, I don't know of anyone that is actually still trying
to win that battle. Maybe the start-ups still have their own agents,
but that's a matter of history and convenience. No one is blowing smoke
in my rear about having huge client market share. Now as I've said a
LOT, NAC functionality becomes weaved into the fabric of the network.
Thus internal network security (note, Mr. Hoff, that I said NETWORK
security) will largely be a feature of the switches you have running
your campus. In two years? Unlikely. I'm talking about a generational
shift, and those take 5-7 years - best case. Now I will concede that
NAC start-ups that want to sell for a premium have a fixed window, and
candidly I think 2 years is too long. The bigger players that have
crappy NAC and no strategy or ability to build it will figure that out
over the next year. Then they'll start buying stuff. So the risk for
the NAC start-ups isn't being flattened, it's being the irrelevance of
being the last one standing.
Link to this
The call of security management -
more data!
So what? -
Saw an announcement from ArcSight cross the wires this morning, about a
new set of integrations between SIEM and
Identity Management. Normally I don't like to cover product
announcements and certainly not Barney partnerships, but this one is
interesting. Why? Remember that the REACT FASTER doctrine (and Mogull's
React BETTER corollary) are all based upon the data that you collect
and your ability to mine it for gold. Being able to correlate actions
within the IT infrastructure and trace those back to a specific user is
cool. These IP to ID bridges have been in place for about 18 months. It
seems this pushes things a bit further in actually working with the
policy engines in the IdM platforms to figure out whether an action is
actually acceptable. Personally, that seems a bit like a holy grail and
I'm not sold on it actually working (Barney releases are easy, true
technical integration at enterprise scale is hard), but the concept is
pretty interesting. In order to contain damage, you need to know where
to look and being able to leverage policies out of the IdM environment
can provide some really cool information to help a skilled analyst
narrow down the issues a lot faster, and that is what reacting faster
is all about. On another note, ArcSight announced their earnings
last week (conference call transcript) and they should be applauded for
their second quarter of anti-FIRE behavior (right, they actually made
their numbers).
Link to this
The Laundry
List
- NAC market up 16% year over year? According to Infonetics anyway. Fratto has it right, why would be get excited about a net $10 million increase in a market that's supposed to be "exploding." - InformationWeek's Analytics Blog
- Both of Big Research release their DLP market reports (MQ and Wave) within a week and the results are largely consistent. Seems like collusion to me (either that or they just believe what the vendors tell them). - Symantec in DLP MQ SearchSecurity on Forrester
- Drinks are on Jeremiah! White Hat raises another $7 big ones. - White Hat release
- Is there a Trend in IBE encryption? Maybe, since Trend rebrands the Identum technology and stays true to IBE. - Trend release
Top Blog Postings
A 12-step program for meetings
It seems I'm not the only one who is pushing for all of us to come to
grips with our addictions. My group is called Security Products
Anonymous (it's the centerpiece of the Pragmatic CSO) and it seems
AndyITGuy wants to start a group called Meeting Attenders Anonymous.
But how are they going to meet? It would be counter-productive to
attend a meeting about not wanting to attend any more meetings, right?
Check out the post, since it's very funny. But Andy's cry for help at
the end of the post rings true. Well, not for me anymore - but for a
lot of the people I work with. I remember how crazy we thought the guys
from Cabletron were back in the early 90's because they had no chairs
in their meeting rooms. Right, it's hard to have an all-day meeting
when you are standing up. After years of wasted time trying to
"group-think" or "work through the issues," I can now appreciate how
quickly decisions would have been made if I was standing up and
couldn't access my email. I feel for the CSOs out there that spend more
time in meetings than doing things. But let's be clear, the job of the
CSO is PERSUASION, and that means meetings and a lot of one on one face
time with the senior executives. If you don't like that, then maybe you
aren't cut out for the C-title. Which is fine, but come clean about
it.
http://andyitguy.blogspot.com/2008/06/hello-my-name-is-andy-and-i-attend.html
Link
to this
These are true public servants
I'll admit that I have no tolerance for bureaucracy or politics or
kissing the rings of the power brokers within an organization. That's
why I don't work in one anymore. This post on BlogInfoSec delves into
the challenges of being a public sector CISO. Imagine not only having
to deal with the bad guys (and gals), but also the organizational
headwind of things like FISMA reporting, lost laptops, career paper
pushers and funding based on... well, I'm not really sure what it's
based on. Right, that is a challenging gig. When the main objective is
more about covering your ass then it is about actually doing anything -
that's got to be hard, especially as Todd says - there is no place to
hide. And in no way am I taking a shot at all the security
professionals that have chosen a path of public service. If anything, I
take off my hat (if I ever wore a hat) and tip it to all of you. You've
got the patience of saints, and a true desire to make a difference.
It's great, but banging my head against a brick wall every day just
isn't for me.
http://www.bloginfosec.com/2008/06/18/being-a-government-security-ciso-life-in-the-fishbowl/
Link
to this
Wait! Stop the Presses! Security
isn't a product!!!
I think I just set the record for the number of exclamation points in a
snippet title. Bully for me. First off, I do want to recognize that in
yesterday's Special Incite, I inadvertently
painted Hoff into a
virtualization security technical box. That was not my intention and
Chris has been doing a lot of work to talk about many of the issues I
described yesterday. To follow up on those thoughts, let's bring Amrito
into the discussion and his post on security as an "operational"
problem. This really gets to the heart of what I'm talking about when I
say security is a feature and that it must be built into the
infrastructure. Yes, we need our CSO to do the high level persuasion
and to figure out what is most important to protect. Then our security
architects figure out how that stuff needs to be protected.
But then who actually protects it? Right, it should be the ops groups -
but as Amrit points out this is a slow evolution. Both because
many organizations are holding onto their security empires, but also
because the vendors haven't necessarily integrated the tools that are
required to make this kind of model work. I'm not in the excuses
business, but the laggards aren't going to be creative to find a way to
make it work. They'll wait until they have no other choice. So, as with
everything else - it always takes longer than you expect and a lot
longer than it should.
http://techbuddha.wordpress.com/2008/06/19/security-as-an-operational-problem/
Link
to this



Speaking as one of your rare readers who actually grew up in Georgia, I have to point out that REM is NOT from Atlanta. They are a product of Athens, Georgia, and us Athenians aren't ceding them to the big city types from Atlanta.
Also, glad you liked our press release. Now we'll impress you with the actual functionality!
Bob
Hi Mike,
Thanks for the mention about our new SIEM+IDM product, ArcSight IdentityView. I agree about avoiding barney releases...We have been working on this product since last year, and have put serious engineering work into it, including a new type of adapter that pulls user models out of IdM systems, new reports for user activity monitoring, a new single-ID mapping capability, and a new application of the profile creation technology we had used in other areas. The whole thing builds on the session correlation we added in ESM 4.0 - the architecture allows us to do some unique things.
The goal was to combine the user and role model info managed by IdM with the activity collection and correlation in our SIEM product, with the goal of understanding who is on the network, what info they are seeing, and which actions they are taking with that info. As you point out, if you have this, you can react faster, and also more effectively.
We introduced the partner program for this at RSA (recall that I briefed you on this), and IdentityView is our first product within that program. We don't see anything else quite like it, in terms of actual product, in the market. If you happen to be at Catalyst this week, we are demoing it and I can show it to you.
-Rick