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Transcript
Packets and Protocols
Security Devices
and Practices
Security Devices and Practices
Information security is an emerging
discipline that combines the efforts of
people, policy, education, training,
awareness, procedures, and technology
to improve the confidentiality, integrity,
and availability of an organization’s
information assets
 Technical controls alone cannot ensure a
secure IT environment, but they are
usually an essential part of information
security programs

Security Devices and Practices
Although technical controls can be an
important part of an information security
program, they must be combined with
sound policy and education, training, and
awareness efforts
 Some of the most powerful and widely
used technical security mechanisms
include:

–
–
–
–
–
–
Access controls
Firewalls
Dial-up protection
Intrusion detection systems
Scanning and analysis tools
Encryption systems
Security Devices and Practices
Security Devices and Practices

Access control encompasses three
processes:
– Confirming the identity of the entity accessing
a logical or physical area (authentication)
– Determining which actions that entity can
perform in that physical or logical area
(authorization)
– Logging their actions (accounting)

A successful access control approach—
whether intended to control physical
access or logical access—always consists
of all three.
Security Devices and Practices
 Mechanism
– Something
– Something
– Something
– Something
 Strong
types
you
you
you
you
know
have
are
produce
authentication uses at least
two different authentication
mechanism types
Security Devices and Practices

Something you know:
– This type of authentication mechanism verifies the
user’s identity by means of a password,
passphrase, or other unique code
A
password is a private word or combination of
characters that only the user should know
 A passphrase is a plain-language phrase, typically
longer than a password, from which a virtual
password is derived
– A good rule of thumb is to require that passwords
be at least eight characters long and contain at
least one number and one special character
Security Devices and Practices

Something you have
– This authentication mechanism makes use of
something (a card, key, or token) that the user
or the system possesses
– One example is a dumb card (such as an ATM
card) with magnetic stripes
– Another example is the smart card containing
a processor
– Another device often used is the cryptographic
token, a processor in a card that has a display
Security Devices and Practices
 Something
you are:
– This authentication mechanism takes
advantage of something inherent in the
user that is evaluated using biometrics
– Most of the technologies that scan
human characteristics convert these
images to obtain some form of
minutiae—unique points of reference
that are digitized and stored in an
encrypted format
Security Devices and Practices
 Something
you do:
– This type of authentication makes use of
something the user performs or
produces
– It includes technology related to
signature recognition and voice
recognition, for example
Security Devices and Practices
Security Devices and Practices

In general, authorization can be handled by:
– Authorization for each authenticated user, in which the
system performs an authentication process to verify the
specific entity and then grants access to resources for
only that entity
– Authorization for members of a group, in which the
system matches authenticated entities to a list of group
memberships, and then grants access to resources
based on the group’s access rights
– Authorization across multiple systems, in which a central
authentication and authorization system verifies entity
identity and grants a set of credentials to the verified
entity
Security Devices and Practices
Security Devices and Practices
To appropriately manage access controls,
an organization must have in place a
formal access control policy, which
determines how access rights are granted
to entities and groups
 This policy must include provisions for
periodically reviewing all access rights,
granting access rights to new employees,
changing access rights when job roles
change, and revoking access rights as
appropriate

Security Devices and Practices

Firewalls
– In information security, a firewall is any device
that prevents a specific type of information
from moving between two networks, often the
outside, known as the un-trusted network
(e.g., the Internet), and the inside, known as
the trusted network

The firewall may be a separate computer
system, a service running on an existing
router or server, or a separate network
containing a number of supporting devices
Security Devices and Practices

Packet Filtering Routers
– Most organizations with an Internet connection
use some form of router between their internal
networks and the external service provider
– Many of these routers can be configured to
block packets that the organization does not
allow into the network

Such an architecture lacks auditing and
strong authentication, and the complexity
of the access control lists used to filter the
packets can grow to a point that degrades
network performance
Security Devices and Practices

When evaluating a firewall, ask the following
questions:
– What type of firewall technology offers the right balance
between protection and cost for the needs of the
organization?
– What features are included in the base price? What
features are available at extra cost? Are all cost factors
known?
– How easy is it to set up and configure the firewall? How
accessible are the staff technicians who can competently
configure the firewall?
– Can the candidate firewall adapt to the growing network
in the target organization?
Security Devices and Practices

Some of the best practices for firewall use are:
– All traffic from the trusted network is allowed out
– The firewall device is never accessible directly from the
public network
– Simple Mail Transport Protocol (SMTP) data is allowed to
pass through the firewall, but should be routed to a
SMTP gateway
– All Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) data should
be denied
– Telnet (terminal emulation) access to all internal servers
from the public networks should be blocked
– When Web services are offered outside the firewall,
HTTP traffic should be handled by some form of proxy
access or DMZ architecture
Security Devices and Practices
Security Devices and Practices
A
host-based IDS works by
configuring and classifying various
categories of systems and data files
– In many cases, IDSs provide only a few
general levels of alert notification
– Unless the IDS is very precisely
configured, benign actions can generate
a large volume of false alarms
– Host-based IDSs can monitor multiple
computers simultaneously
Security Devices and Practices

Network-based IDSs monitor network traffic and,
when a predefined condition occurs, notify the
appropriate administrator
– The network-based IDS looks for patterns of network
traffic
– Network IDSs must match known and unknown attack
strategies against their knowledge base to determine
whether an attack has occurred
– These systems yield many more false-positive readings
than do host-based IDSs, because they are attempting
to read the network activity pattern to determine what is
normal and what is not
Security Devices and Practices

A signature-based IDS or knowledge-based IDS
examines data traffic for something that matches
the signatures, which comprise preconfigured,
predetermined attack patterns
– The problem with this approach is that the signatures
must be continually updated, as new attack strategies
emerge
– A weakness of this method is the time frame over which
attacks occur
– If attackers are slow and methodical, they may slip
undetected through the IDS, as their actions may not
match a signature that includes factors based on
duration of the events
Security Devices and Practices

The statistical anomaly-based IDS (stat IDS) or
behavior-based IDS first collects data from
normal traffic and establishes a baseline
– It then periodically samples network activity, based on
statistical methods, and compares the samples to the
baseline
– When the activity falls outside the baseline parameters
(known as the clipping level), the IDS notifies the
administrator
– The advantage of this approach is that the system is
able to detect new types of attacks, because it looks for
abnormal activity of any type
Security Devices and Practices

Managing IDSs
– Just as with any alarm system, if there is no
response to an alert, then an alarm does no
good
– IDSs must be configured using technical
knowledge and adequate business and security
knowledge to differentiate between routine
circumstances and low, moderate, or severe
threats
– A properly configured IDS can translate a
security alert into different types of notification
– A poorly configured IDS may yield only noise
Security Devices and Practices
RADIUS and TACACS are systems that
authenticate the credentials of users who
are trying to access an organization’s
network via a dial-up connection
 A Remote Authentication Dial-In User
Service (RADIUS) system centralizes the
management of user authentication by
placing the responsibility for
authenticating each user in the central
RADIUS server

Security Devices and Practices
 When
a remote access server (RAS)
receives a request for a network
connection from a dial-up client, it
passes the request along with the
user’s credentials to the RADIUS
server; RADIUS then validates the
credentials
 The Terminal Access Controller
Access Control System (TACACS)
works similarly and is based on a
client/server configuration
Security Devices and Practices
Security Devices and Practices



Scanning and analysis tools can find
vulnerabilities in systems, holes in security
components, and other unsecured aspects of the
network
Conscientious administrators will have several
informational Web sites bookmarked, and they
frequently browse for new vulnerabilities, recent
conquests, and favorite assault techniques
There is nothing wrong with security
administrators using the tools used by attackers
to examine their own defenses and search out
areas of vulnerability
Security Devices and Practices
 WPA
is an industry standard, created
by the Wi-Fi Alliance
 Has some compatibility issues with
older WAPs
 Provides increased capabilities for
authentication, encryption, and
throughput
Security Devices and Practices
 Vulnerability
scanners, which are
variants of port scanners, are
capable of scanning networks for
very detailed information
 They identify exposed user names
and groups, show open network
shares, and expose configuration
problems and other server
vulnerabilities
Security Devices and Practices
A
packet sniffer is a network tool that
collects and analyzes packets on a
network
 It can be used to eavesdrop on network
traffic
 A packet sniffer must be connected
directly to a local network from an
internal location
Security Devices and Practices
 To
use a packet sniffer legally, you
must:
– Be on a network that the organization
owns, not leases
– Be under the direct authorization of the
network’s owners
– Have the knowledge and consent of the
users
– Have a justifiable business reason for
doing so
Security Devices and Practices

Content Filters
– Another type of utility that effectively protects the
organization’s systems from misuse and unintentional
denial-of-service conditions is the content filter
– A content filter is a software program or a
hardware/software appliance that allows administrators
to restrict content that comes into a network
– The most common application of a content filter is the
restriction of access to Web sites with non–businessrelated material, such as pornography
– Another application is the restriction of spam e-mail
– Content filters ensure that employees are using network
resources appropriately
Security Devices and Practices

Managing Scanning and Analysis Tools
– It is vitally important that the security
manager be able to see the organization’s
systems and networks from the viewpoint of
potential attackers
– The security manager should develop a
program using in-house resources,
contractors, or an outsourced service provider
to periodically scan his or her own systems
and networks for vulnerabilities with the same
tools that a typical hacker might use
Security Devices and Practices

Drawbacks to using scanners and analysis tools,
content filters, etc:
– These tools do not have human-level capabilities
– Most tools function by pattern recognition, so they only
handle known issues
– Most tools are computer-based, so they are prone to
errors, flaws, and vulnerabilities of their own
– All of these tools are designed, configured, and operated
by humans and are subject to human errors
– Some governments, agencies, institutions, and
universities have established policies or laws that protect
the individual user’s right to access content
– Tool usage and configuration must comply with an
explicitly articulated policy, and the policy must provide
for valid exceptions
Security Devices and Practices

E-Mail Security
– Secure Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions
(S/MIME) builds on the Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions (MIME) encoding format by adding
encryption and authentication via digital signatures
based on public key cryptosystems
– Privacy Enhanced Mail (PEM) has been proposed by
the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) as a
standard that will function with public key
cryptosystems
– PEM uses 3DES symmetric key encryption and RSA
for key exchanges and digital signatures
Security Devices and Practices
 Pretty
Good Privacy (PGP) was
developed by Phil Zimmerman and
uses the IDEA Cipher, a 128-bit
symmetric key block encryption
algorithm with 64-bit blocks for
message encoding
– Like PEM, it uses RSA for symmetric key
exchange and to support digital
signatures
Security Devices and Practices


IP Security (IPSec) is the primary and now dominant
cryptographic authentication and encryption product of
the IETF’s IP Protocol Security Working Group
IPSec combines several different cryptosystems:
– Diffie-Hellman key exchange for deriving key material
between peers on a public network
– Public key cryptography for signing the Diffie-Hellman
exchanges to guarantee the identity of the two parties
– Bulk encryption algorithms, such as DES, for encrypting the
data
– Digital certificates signed by a certificate authority to act as
digital ID cards
Security Devices and Practices
 IPSec
has two components:
– The IP Security protocol itself, which
specifies the information to be added to
an IP packet and indicates how to
encrypt packet data
– The Internet Key Exchange, which uses
asymmetric key exchange and
negotiates the security associations
Security Devices and Practices

IPSec works in two modes of operation: transport
and tunnel
– In transport mode, only the IP data is encrypted—not
the IP headers themselves; this allows intermediate
nodes to read the source and destination addresses
– In tunnel mode, the entire IP packet is encrypted and
inserted as the payload in another IP packet

IPSec and other cryptographic extensions to
TCP/IP are often used to support a virtual private
network (VPN), a private, secure network
operated over a public and insecure network
Security Devices and Practices

Securing the WEB
– Secure Electronic Transactions (SET)
 Developed
by MasterCard and VISA in 1997 to
provide protection from electronic payment fraud
 Encrypts credit card transfers with DES for encryption
and RSA for key exchange
– Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)
 Developed
by Netscape in 1994 to provide security for
e-commerce transactions
 Mainly relies on RSA for key transfer and on IDEA,
DES, or 3DES for encrypted symmetric key-based
data transfer
Security Devices and Practices

Secure Hypertext Transfer Protocol
(SHTTP)
– Provides secure e-commerce transactions as
well as encrypted Web pages for secure data
transfer over the Web, using different
algorithms

Secure Shell (SSH)
– Provides security for remote access
connections over public networks by using
tunneling, authentication services between a
client and a server
– Used to secure replacement tools for terminal
emulation, remote management, and file
transfer applications
Security Devices and Practices

Securing Authentication
– A final use of cryptosystems is to provide
enhanced and secure authentication
– One approach to this issue is provided by
Kerberos, which uses symmetric key
encryption to validate an individual user’s
access to various network resources
– It keeps a database containing the private
keys of clients and servers that are in the
authentication domain that it supervises