The Daily Incite - September 24, 2008
September 24, 2008 - Volume 3, #78
Good Morning:
I remember when I was a kid, one of the "crazy" things we used to do
were crank calls. You know, call someone up and call them a name. Or
dial the phone at 2 AM and just let it ring. Or call them and say the
pizza will be delivered in 15 minutes, thanks for the order. Silly
stuff like that. We even took advantage of three way calling phones to
put together some ad hoc conference calls. We'd call the really cute
girl and then connect her to the not so cool guy. They didn't have a
lot to say to each other. Those were a lot of
laughs.

And then called ID became available. And the *69 service to ring back a
number that just called. I'm sure it was quite a surprise to the first
few crank callers that got a call back from an irate parent about a
call at 2 AM. OK, that gig is done. A casualty of technical innovation.
Now it seems that simple hacks are also done. Since they have allegedly
identified the Gov. Palin email attacker, through of all things, a
proxy log - it's a lot more dangerous to do simple pranks nowadays. Of
course, hacking into the email account of a vice presidential candidate
is more than just a simple prank, the outcome is the same.
You can run, but you can't hide. Unless you live in Estonia, that is.
Script kiddies be warned, unless you fancy a visit from the FBI at an
inopportune time (is there an opportune time for a visit from the
FBI?), you better improve your obfuscation techniques. Attackers always
leave a trail, the question is does the trail lead to your dorm room,
or somewhere it would be very hard to track. Like Estonia.
But that's not even the point. They'll make an example out of this
Palin email attacker, and they should. It'll be a deterrent for all of
the novices that realize they are out of their league. Not in
attacking, almost anyone can do that. But not getting caught.
Will something like this public execution deter the general increase in
Internet fraud that we've seen? I say nope, not by a long shot. The
reality is the risk-reward equation is still heavily weighted in favor
of the bad guys. Especially in Estonia. It's prohibitively expensive to
prosecute them and it's incredibly lucrative for them to continue
stealing. How do you think that ends?
Right, don't leave anything to chance. Monitor your bank accounts and
credit cards almost daily. Use
strong passwords (and probably a password manager) on the accounts that
matter, like your financial accounts, web mail, and ecommerce sites.
Teach your friends and family to do the same types of things. Apply the
REACT FASTER doctrine to your own personal lives. They'll catch some of
the bad guys (especially if they live in the US), but there are always
another 10 to fill the wake of the last one.
That's just the way it goes.
Have a great day.
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Top Security News
Truth? Who needs that...
So what? -
For liars, the lies aren't really lies. They are "spin." We are seeing
a lot of that type of crap emanating from the Presidential election (on
both sides) and it seems we still see it in our own little technology
world. Susan Hanley rails against this kind of crap
on her NetworkWorld blog. Sometimes I'd like to have a
conversation like I have with my kids. The reality is kids don't think
you are any smarter than them. They can't really because the idea of
smarter or dumber is an abstract concept. So they figure they can just
pull the wool over your eyes and you'll smile and be happy. Of course,
they don't realize I pulled the same stunts when I was a kid. But at
some point, you grow out of that. At some point you realize that the
person on the other side of the conversation isn't dumb and by
"spinning" a version of the "truth" that may not be so truthful, you
not only alienate them - you piss them off. But it's like the old
Cabletron pricing model (why are you three times more expensive?
Because 10% of the customers just pay it and we discount for everyone
else), they figure a certain percentage of customers won't know the
difference and they'll just accept the spin as fact. Personally, I find
that perspective appalling and do my best to call it out with great
vengeance and furious anger those who would attempt to poison and
destroy my brothers.
Link to this
Premature chasmuluation
So what? -
Great observations here from Tim Wilson on the dichotomy between what
problems customers need to solve today vs. what problems much of the
vendor world is talking about. To use yet another political
analogy, the house is burning down and all we talk about is lipstick on
pigs. He's exactly right and in a lot of cases the media is responsible
for this. Fact is, the media gets paid based on page views now. Most of
the technology magazines are thin and many others have just gone away.
Everything is online nowadays and that means it requires page views to
monetize. No one wants to hear about the burning house because everyone
knows it's burning. It's not interesting anymore. So the media covers
the stuff that is new, maybe sexy, and certainly interesting (like
virtualization security) REGARDLESS of the fact that very very few
people actually have the problem. You also have another dynamic here
which is technology M&A. Emerging vendors need to make their
products interesting, and deceive the buyers (acquirers, not
enterprises) into think there is a market for the product. Then they
can get a big valuation and make market development into the acquirer's
problem. And the final factor, most of the folks truly in the trenches
don't listen to a lot of the vendor babble. They are too busy getting
their ass handed to them every day.
Link to this
Finally, they got the memo - make
endpoint security invisible
So what? -
It's the fall, so that means many of the AV vendors update their
endpoint security suites. You know, they need to put a new box out and
increment the year to justify the extra $50-75 per desktop they need to
collect to keep themselves fat, dumb and happy. Of course, the past few
years have been problematic because most customers have started to
notice that their PCs are increasingly sluggish and that makes them
unhappy. They don't want to know the AV is working, they don't want to
know it's there, and they certainly don't want their machine to bog
down every time they open an application. Moreover, they don't want to
be interrupted when they are doing something and they don't want to
approve everything they are trying to do. Basically they want
transparency Until they don't (which is when they are under attack).
Finally it seems the Big Yellow was listening, according to Walt Mossberg anyway.
And I tend to believe Walt because he's NOT a security guy. He's a tech
user and he's much more interested in user experience. This is good
news for Symantec, since reducing the nuisance factor will become a big
differentiator - absolutely in the consumer space and I also suspect
for business users as well.
Link to this
The Laundry
List
- This is why Cisco has such market share. They've got their own fanboys that save their shekels to buy equipment for a lab to get more Cisco certifications. - Cisco Subnet blog (on NetworkWorld)
- Words you live to regret. Evidently Websense sees the economy as a "non-recession." Help me understand the upside of that kind of statement. Especially after the class action attorneys go after them when they miss. - Tech Ticker
- Imprivata gets two patents on biometrics, maybe they are looking at a Tumbleweed-esque go to market strategy. Except no one really cares about biometrics. - Imprivata release
- Oracle updates their GRC offering, but forgets to mention what the thing does (at least in the release). It's Oracle, just trust them. - Oracle release
Top Blog Postings
Incident response SCRUM
No, this isn't some new game coming from down under. This is a very
interesting idea from Cutaway regarding building incident response and
disaster recovery plans using a structured development process. I'm a
huge proponent of making sure the incident response plan is documented
and practiced (Chapter 8 of the P-CSO), but it's the documented part
that is a challenge for most security professionals - especially given
the number of other fastballs flying at their heads at all times. Don's
idea is to use a system development lifecycle to identify the right
folks, get their requirements, and then figure out the best way to
achieve those requirements. It seems pretty straight forward, and in
concept it is. But doing it in practice is a lot harder. But not as
hard as cleaning up the mess after you've bungled the incident
response.
http://www.cutawaysecurity.com/blog/archives/320
Link
to this
Think like a billionaire!
Adam doesn't like that many folks recommend that good guys think like
bad guys. It's too hard. We don't know what the bad guys are thinking.
Adam suggests they try to think like a professional chef to get a feel
for the futility of that kind of approach. How about we think like a
billionaire, which is similarly remote? He makes a good point, but it's
really a play on words. The concept of thinking like an attacker isn't
so much to try to get into their dysfunctional heads, it's to USE THEIR
TECHNIQUES. So you need to understand the tools they use and learn how
they use them, and then you have a chance to defend yourself. Not to
put words in Adam's mouth, but it sounds like he is really asking for
is better educational tools to train the next generation of security
professionals. Foodies have the Food Network, where if they watch long
enough, they kind of can get an idea of how to "think like a
professional chef." We don't have the Security Channel, so we've got to
do something else to more effectively train personnel.
http://www.emergentchaos.com/archives/2008/09/think_like_an_attacker.html
Link
to this
Rich needs to read the Black Swan
(and so do you)
The Mogull condemns most risk quantification in this post, mostly
because the Financials can figure out how to do it (and they have a lot
more at "risk" than us security pukes), so therefore it can't be done.
Rich is right on a lot of these points, but ultimately a lot of the
issue has more to do with the reality that we CANNOT predict outliers.
Every security professional should read The Black Swan. Yes, it's hard to
get through. Yes, your eyes will bleed at times. But it really
solidified in my mind the reality that we cannot predict the next
successful, wide-spread attack, so you have to plan for that. The sin
of the Financials is that they didn't foresee a total meltdown of the
sub-prime business. It was an outlier and they didn't plan for it and
now the US taxpayer will be footing the bill. You couldn't assign a
probability to this kind of occurrence, but it did happen which makes
Rich question the ultimately value of trying to quantify risk. The
Black Swan approach assumes nothing and forces you to know how to react
when an unknown happens. And that's how we live to fight another day.
http://securosis.com/2008/09/17/the-fallacy-of-complete-and-accurate-risk-quantification/
Link
to this



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