The VeriSign Security Review - April 2006 from VeriSign, Inc.

The VeriSign Security Review

April 2006

March saw a large amount of malicious activity and the VeriSign Threat Level is raised to 3 due to exploits of the Microsoft IE vulnerability disclosed mid-month. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the number of American households victimized by identity theft has reached 3.6 million, and phishing is likely to play a larger role in increasing that number. Phishing is growing and maturing as a crime industry, and security professionals must seek comprehensive solutions to combat this plague.

In this issue:

Hot Topics

Standards and Regulations

News from VeriSign

Ask a VeriSign Consultant

Security Events

Hot Topics

Identity Theft Tops 3 Percent

Three percent (or about 3.6 million) of American households became victims of identity theft in 2004, reveals the US Department of Justice’s National Crime Victimization Survey. The survey of 42,000 households found that young heads of households and those in the highest income brackets are more likely targets of identity theft. Half of the surveyed victims discovered the identity theft after unknown charges were made against an account or after they had problems banking. A quarter of those surveyed had problems with credit cards and one out of six had to pay higher interest rates.

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March Threat Summary

The VeriSign iDefense Threat Level remains at Level 3 due to the critical Microsoft 06-012 vulnerability. The vulnerability targets Internet Explorer and affects Windows 2000, Windows XP, and Windows Server 2003. Exploits are active but limited, and third-party fixes have surfaced ahead of Microsoft’s April 11th patch. Microsoft disclosed that it was working with industry partners and law enforcement to remove Web sites that are already exploiting the vulnerability.

In March, US-CERT issued an information notice warning of increased DDoS attacks using spoofed recursive DNS requests, which could potentially generate a multi-gigabit flood of DNS replies. An attacker can send thousands of spoofed requests to a DNS server that allows recursion. If the DNS server processed the requests as valid and returned the DNS replies to the spoofed recipient (the victim), the attacker could potentially generate a multi-gigabit flood of DNS replies. The technique is known as an amplifier attack, because it takes advantage of mis-configured DNS servers to reflect the attack onto a target while amplifying the packet volume.

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Why Phishing Works

The A new study reveals that phishers can fool more than 90 percent of users with a professional-looking site. In a report entitled “Why Phishing Works”, Dr. Dhamija of Harvard University, J.D. Tygar of UC Berkeley, and Marti Hearst of UC Berkeley suggest that to combat phishing, behavioral elements must be considered in new security system designs. As many as 23 percent of the participants studied did not fully understand indicators designed to signal trustworthiness such as the padlock icon. Instead, many relied only on the content of the Web site to evaluate its authenticity. While all of the participants have at least a college degree, the most polished design of a fake bank Web site still tricked more than 90 percent of them into proceeding further. 
 
The study concluded that distinguishing spoofed sites from the real ones is a sophisticated undertaking, as humans take a variety of visual indicators as their cue to trust a third party, many of which are very easy to spoof. The researchers are currently testing a new design that allows a remote server to prove its identity in a way that is easy to verify but difficult to spoof. 
 
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GAO Reports on Information Security

In February of 2006, the US Government Accountability Office released reports on information security at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

After the GAO’s scathing 2005 report on information security at the SEC, the 2006 report concludes that “most of the previously reported information security controls and program weaknesses persist.” Chief among the weaknesses are access control and patch management.

While noting progress at the IRS, the GAO says “significant control weaknesses,” such as excessive access and inadequate logging, remain. One of the key concerns is that the IRS still routinely permits “unencrypted protocols for remote log-on capability.”

The HHS, still lacking a department-wide information security program, also received criticism from the GAO. Of note, the report points out that system-administrative access was not always restricted and that data was not always encrypted. 
 
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Standards and Regulations

IEEE To Propose New Wireless Security Standard

The taskforce that created 802.11i, the standard behind Wi-Fi protected access and WPA-2, patched security holes by introducing new cryptographic algorithms to protect data traveling across wireless networks. Now, fast handoff, radio resource measurement, discovery and wireless network management schemes are being introduced in the upcoming 802.11r, 802.11k, and 802.11v drafts. As new and highly sensitive information about wireless networks will be exchanged, the IEEE is also working on 802.11w, extending 802.11i to provide AES encryption and de-authentication.

Overall, 802.11w promises to patch security problems created by the flow of new and detailed information over management frames. By protecting the contents of most frames from eavesdropping, and of certain crucial frames from forging, 802.11w should stop the information leakage and reduce some basic DoS attacks. IEEE expects to ratify 802.11w in the first half of 2008.

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House Approves Breach Notification Bill

The US Energy and Commerce Committee approved the Data Accountability and Trust Act (DATA), a law similar to California’s Security Breach Information Act. Under the proposals, if a data breach does occur, a company must notify any customers concerned and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which can then demand an audit. The bill would also allow the FTC to enforce standards on data retention and  require companies to appoint a head of security. Besides California, 17 other states also have similar laws in place. 
 
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News from VeriSign

VeriSign and ACBB-BITS to Provide Banking Security

VeriSign and the technology and telecommunications unit of Atlantic Central Banker Bank Banking Infrastructure & Technology Services (ACBB-BITS), announced they have reached an agreement to deliver security services to community banks throughout the five-state, Mid-Atlantic region.

Under terms of the agreement, VeriSign and ACBB-BITS will provide an integrated set of managed security services (MSS), including firewall management, intrusion detection/prevention management and vulnerability management to help regional and community banks protect their internal networks from unauthorized access and malicious activity. 
 
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Ask a VeriSign Consultant 

Each month, our highly experienced security consultants share their expertise in an area of your concern. This month, Doug Barbin discusses third-party risk management. 
 
Q:
It’s difficult enough dealing with my own security program, not to mention my partners and service provider.  Do you have any practical advice on managing the security of third-parties I share data with or connect to?

A: You ask a very important question and something that there is not an easy answer to.  Companies in all industries and geographies are struggling with the same problem.  Here are a few pieces of advice and references for more information.

1 – Security Programs Make sure that your business partners have a core security program in place that includes dedicated individuals, formal roles, responsibilities, and a documented security policy.  This is bare minimum stuff and should include all of the areas such as access control, data protection, patching, application development, monitoring, awareness, and others that you would find in the ISO17799 standard for information security.  It is usually pretty obvious whether or not a company has a formal program so beware of partners where security is a part time job for one of the “IT guys.”

2 – Data Protection This is probably what you are most concerned about.  Compromises happen to companies in all walks of life.  What if it happens to your partner?  Is your data encrypted or otherwise protected from loss?  What kind of access controls are in place to prevent unauthorized persons at the partner company from accessing your data or worse, cross contamination with other customers of that third party?  When we did an analysis of the top reasons companies failed their Payment Card Industry (PCI) assessments, protection of data at rest was number one.  Make sure you evaluate how your data is being stored and always go in with a worst case what-if line of thinking,

3 – Application Security Many outsourcing arrangements involve some sort of hosted or COTS application that your company uses.  This is a critical area as most of the compromises we are seeing are as a result of poorly configured applications.  It is important that you are confident that your partner has gone through the appropriate due diligence such as application vulnerability testing and/or secure code review. 

4 – Monitoring and Response We hear a lot about security breaches in the news but there are many more that go unreported because they are detected in a timely manner.  Make sure your partner has the necessary monitoring capabilities such as intrusion detection and log monitoring.  Most importantly, make sure there is process for the partner to notify you if a compromise of your data has occurred.  Many companies are now putting this in their contracts.   

These are some of the key pieces that tend to create challenges for partnerships.   There are some interesting things going on in the industry.  The Payment Card Industry (PCI), for example, was first to the game with Visa and MasterCard mandating how merchants and processors should be handling credit card data.  On a broader level, many of the large institutions have developed programs to classify their third party providers according to risk and then go through an assessment process.  The assessment process includes review of both companies and applications.  In addition, the Banking Infrastructure and Technology Services (BITS) Financial Services Roundtable has launched a shared assessments program in hopes that service providers can undergo a single assessment that can be leveraged by multiple financial services institutions.  This is a very exciting program as companies spend a significant amount of time “auditing” their partners, providers, and even customers to a degree.  See http://www.bitsinfo.org/FISAP/ for more information.    
 
Douglas W. Barbin is part of the product management team for VeriSign Security Services.  Prior to this role, he was Director of the western US consulting practice.  A CPA and CISSP, he has extensive experience in performing enterprise security audits and has helped many companies develop internal risk management programs.  Mr. Barbin is on the technical advisory committee for the BITS Financial Services Shared Assessments Program (FISAP).

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Security Events

April 24-26, 2006 
LinuxWorld NetworkWorld Conference & Expo 
Toronto, Canada 
 
April 26, 2006 
ISSA InfoSec Conference 
Boise, ID 
 
May 1-4, 2006 
SecuritySolutions 2006 
Tampa, FL 

May 2-3, 2006 
SecureWorld Expo 
Atlanta, GA 

May 3-6, 2006 
Computer Enterprise Investigations Conference 
Las Vegas, NV 
 

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