The Daily Incite - August 15, 2008
August 15, 2008 - Volume 3, #69
Good Morning:
I know I harp on the importance of managing expectations frequently,
mostly because I keep seeing data points everywhere that reinforce the
point. As I continue to binge on the Olympics, the concept continues to
resonate. The US Men's Gymnastic team got a Bronze. It was very
unexpected, given the injuries to the Hamm brothers. So they are
ecstatic. Yet, the women's team was disappointed with the Silver. Why?
Expectations. The girls thought they could win after 2 rotations.

Even magical Michael Phelps was pissed off after the 100 butterfly
event. He won Gold, set a world record and he's still pissed. Turned
out his goggles were leaking, so he was swimming blind. And he still
expected to swim faster. Again, expectations.
Now it's time for the NFL season to start. I'm taking the boy to the
opening pre-season Falcons game on Saturday, exercising my new season
tickets. It's very exciting, even though I expect the Falcons to suck
this year. I just love to watch football, even if it's not the NY
Giants.
Matt Ryan is poised to step in as the starter and future of the
franchise sometime over the season. This year, the expectations are
low. Over time, they won't be. But he should enjoy the fact that he can
learn this year and not really be raked over the coals when the Falcons
make some dumb mistakes and lose some games. It's all about managing
expectations.
Brett Favre meanwhile is in exactly the opposite position. The NY Jets
want him to come in and have an immediate impact. He's got little
wiggle room to learn the system and to be the hyper-aggressive Favre
that ends up making as many mistakes as he makes great plays. It's not
like NY is a forgiving place. I'm sure the crazy New Yorkers will be
jumping Eli when he throws an INT or 10. Super Bowl ring or not, it's
always about what have you done lately.
The good news is that you probably don't have millions of fans hanging
on your every move. That takes off the immediate pressure and ensures
you likely won't be tabloid fodder, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't
always be paying attention to expectations. You need to. If you do it
wrong, you are certain to disappoint people. If you do it right, you
are a super-star. Even if you accomplish exactly the same
thing.
Have a great weekend. And meet those expectations.
Photo: "BRETTS"
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by nationalparodyleague
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Top Security News
Don't hold your breath for the demise of
passwords
So what? -
I've been in this game for a long time. Almost as long as I've been in
the game, people have been calling for the end of passwords. And there
have been lots of "contenders," positioning to replace the good old
fashioned password. It still hasn't happened yet, and I don't expect it
to happen anytime soon. This latest discussion by SJSU professor
Randall Stross talks about the fact that passwords aren't secure.
It's all stuff we've heard before. Widespread use of strong
authentication techniques is cost prohibitive and doesn't solve the
problems of identity theft or phishing. Personally, I try to eliminate
the issues I know can get me. Like a dictionary attack. So I use strong
passwords with a password manager (I use 1password) to eliminate the
complexity. RoboForm is pretty well regarded on the Windows side. Will
a strong password stop a well crafted XSS, MITM or CSRF attack. Nope.
But it will stop some basic attacks and I think over time the data has
shown that it tends to be the basic that is most successful.
Link to this
Reducing the Fed's attack surface
So what? -
Evidently the US Feds have been watching the Weakest Link and figured
that maybe it was a bad idea to have 8,000 different connections to the
Internet. The initiative is called Trusted Internet
Connection (TIC). Clearly the more connections the more
places to screw up a configuration and leave a hole. So this idea of
reducing the number of connections to about 100 is kind of interesting,
but I'm not sure it's feasible. Those would need to be some pretty big
ass pipes and there is little room for error. Sure you can throw a lot
of money on monitoring and managed services and the like. But if you
are wrong, the bad guys get access to not just a small section of the
US Fed networks, but large swathes of territory. It's also interesting
that the pendulum is swinging back to private networks. It wasn't too
long ago that it was all about moving away from private packet services
and using branch to branch VPNs to cheapen transport. Now I guess it'll
swing back to connecting sites via private network backbones and
aggregating the access to only a few points. What's old is new again,
though it's funny we are pulling out the bell bottoms of networks due
to a security issue.
Link to this
7 years later we're thinking
about TLD contingencies
So what? -
How the Internet stays up with reasonable uptime continues to amaze me.
Especially when I hear about initiatives like the Registry Failure Task
Force that are formed in 2001 and just now starting to move forward
with an architecture that would provide a bit more resilience into the
system. Nothing in how Larry Seltzer describes the
plan seems too groundbreaking. You know, who should do what
and then who should they tell. They even claim they are going to
practice their response. Good luck with that. It's a great idea and I'm
pleased that the idea of containing the damage is alive and well from
the folks that run the Internet. Ultimately it doubt it'll be any of
the current attack vectors that bring the Internet to its knees. But
sooner or later something will emerge and we won't be ready, but at
least there will be a plan to recover. And that's about the best we can
do.
Link to this
The Laundry
List
- Clear sailing ahead. The TSA takes CLEAR out of the penalty box after the misplaced laptop incident. Now they are going to encrypt laptops. Imagine that. - BTNmag coverage
- More from the "I pulled numbers out of my ass" category, Aberdeen says best in class vulnerability and threat management yields 91% marginal ROI. Huh? What is marginal ROI? What is best in class anything? Who cares, I'm sure the vendors are happy. - Aberdeen release
- Security Innovation takes a page out of the TruSecure book. When you have a methodology that works, but no one knows what it is, then just call it a "certification," give the customers a piece of paper, and jack up the price twofold and life is good. Fact is, having someone credible like SI say your software security program is up to snuff is a good thing, but the certification angle. Meh. - Security Innovation release
- Where is Lenin when you need him? Google announces the KeyCzar, for "simple and safe crypto." I don't think I've ever seen those three words (simple, safe, crypto) together in one sentence. Let's just hope developers don't start shooting off their feet with these safe and simple libraries. - Google Security Blog
Top Blog Postings
He blinded me with science....SCIENCE
Thomas Dolby lives and not just as some wacky podcasting dude. The
Mogull brings up a good point in his Dark Reading column about actually
having some data regarding vulnerability disclosure. That would be
novel. Right now it's very much a he-said, she-said activity. We think
it's bad that HD published the DNS attack in Metasploit. But are we
sure? Does security by obscurity work? And for how long? These are all
very interesting questions, and a topic rife with dissension and
opinion. Data would solve the problems. But gathering the data, not so
easy. Rich asks you do to a poll, and you should do that. Is that data?
Nope. It's opinion. Were you hurt or helped is getting at people's
opinion. There are enough folks tracking enough exploits that I think
there is probably enough data out there to start drawing some
conclusions. But getting there will require a significant amount of
sharing and cooperation, which isn't necessarily the strong suit of the
security industry.
http://www.darkreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=160415
Link
to this
Ding dong, SIM is dead? Yeah, not
so much...
I wish everyone would just remember that the security business is like
Night of the Living Dead. We can never kill anything off, it just hangs
out in the cemetery until some desperate producer decides to roll
another zombie movie. So Raffy's first post that SIM is dead was really kind of
ridiculous. Thankfully he saw fit to clarify what he's saying in this
post, which is SIM is dead - unless... My opinion is that the first
generation of SIM didn't do what it needed to. It was too hard, too
expensive, took too long to see value. There are lots of folks that are
working on those issues. Of course, we still aren't there yet, but the
industry is making progress. And the biggest reason I don't see the
idea of SIM dying (although the implementation will clearly change and
evolve) is because CUSTOMERS NEED IT. Unless someone comes up with some
magic fairy dust that all of a sudden tells users what's going on with
their systems and what they should be focusing on RIGHT NOW, then we
need security management capabilities. But anytime you pronounce
something dead it generates lots of page views, eh?
http://blogs.splunk.com/raffy/2008/07/18/sim-is-dead-unless/
Link
to this
Lets start the hype engine for
2009
Stuart King works for a conference producer (amongst many other things
that his employer does), so obviously the folks on the "product" side
of the house can and should consult him about what's hot in security. I
guess it is getting towards the end of 2008, which means we all have to
start thinking about topics for 2009. Great. For the 5th year in a row,
I suspect 2009 will be very much like 2008. We are still bailing out
the leaky boat with a small cup. Sure, there are new and different
attack vectors. And things like "the cloud" are causing us to revisit
our general security architectures. And compliance certainly isn't
going away as a key issue for security folks everywhere. BUT, maybe in
2009 we can start actually implementing the stuff we bought in 2006 and
making sure we are more effectively doing the blocking and tackling
that we all know can use some improvement. But alas, that isn't too
sexy for a conference producer. Do you wonder why most of these folks
don't really ask my opinion?
http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/stuart_king/2008/08/2009securitypredictions.html
Link
to this



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