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E-Commerce Technology Risk and Security Brian Trevey and Randy Romes Presenter Contact Information Randall J. Romes, CISSP, MCP Principal, Information Security Services LarsonAllen LLP 612-397-3114 Office 612-554-3967 Cell [email protected] www.larsonallen.com Brian Trevey Vice President - Delivery Trustwave 410/573-6910 x7828 Office 410/507-3084 Cell [email protected] www.trustwave.com Confidential Agenda • Trends in E-Commerce and Information Security • Compliance Drivers • Security Best Practices • Recommendations Confidential Anatomy of a Data Breach – Initial Entry Trustwave Data Breach Analysis Top Methods of Entry Included: • Remote Access Applications [45%] – Default vendor supplied or weak passwords [90%] • 3rd Party Connections [42%] – MPLS, ATM, frame relay • SQL Injection [6%] – Web application compromises [90%] • • • Exposed Services [4%] Remote File Inclusion [2%] Email Trojan [<1%] – 2 recent Adobe vulnerability cases • Physical Access [<1%] Confidential Anatomy of a Data Breach – Initial Entry SANS 2009 Cyber Security Risk Report • Client side software vulnerabilities • Commonly used programs such as Adobe PDF Reader, QuickTime, Adobe Flash and Microsoft Office • Internet facing websites (> 60% of total Internet attack attempts) • Web application vulnerabilities such as SQL injection and Cross-Site Scripting flaws in open-source as well as custom-built applications account for more than 80% of the vulnerabilities being discovered. Attack Vectors: • Email Phishing • Drive by Downloads Confidential Email Phishing – Targeted Attack Randall J. Romes [[email protected]] Randall J. Romes [[email protected]] Two or Three telltale signs Can you find them? https://microsoft.issgs.net Confidential Email Phishing – Targeted Attack https://microsoft.issgs.net Fewer tell tale signs on fake websites Confidential Michigan Company Sues Bank Michigan company is suing its bank after cyber thieves allegedly made fraudulent wire transfers totaling US $560,000. The cyber thieves obtained the banking account credentials through a phishing email sent to an employee at EMI. The transactions wired funds to bank accounts in Russia, Estonia, Scotland, Finland, China and the US and were withdrawn soon after the deposits were made. Alleges Comerica's security practices made EMI vulnerable to the phishing attack. The bank allegedly routinely sent its online customers emails with links asking them to submit information to renew digital certificates. Also alleges that the bank failed to notice unusual activity. Until the fraudulent transactions were made, EMI had made just two wire transfers ever; in just a three-hour period, 47 wire transfers and 12 transfer of fund requests were made. In addition, after EMI became aware of the situation and asked the bank to halt transactions, the bank allegedly failed to do so until 38 more had been initiated. Confidential Bank Sues Customer for ACH Fraud??? A Texas bank is suing commercial banking customers Cyber thieves made a series of ACH transactions that totaled $801,495 from Hillary Machinery Inc.'s bank account. The bank was able to retrieve about $600,000 of the money, Customer subsequently sent a letter requesting that the bank refund the remaining $200,000, Bank responded by filing the lawsuit requesting that the court certify that Banks's security was in fact reasonable, and that it processed the wire transfers in good faith. Documents filed with the court allege that the fraudulent transactions were initiated using the defendant's valid online banking credentials. Confidential Incident Response – Investigative Conclusions Window of Data Exposure While attackers were still on systems an average of 156 days before being detected, elimination of stored data greatly reduces the data loss exposure. Confidential Penetration Tests – Top 10 – External Network Rank Vulnerability Name Circa Attack Difficulty 1 Unprotected Application Management Interface 1994 Easy 2 Unprotected Infrastructure Management Interface 1993 Easy 3 Access to Internal Application via the Internet 1997 Medium 4 Misconfigured Firewall Permits Access to Internal 1993 Hard 5 Default or Easy to Determine Credentials 1979 Trivial 6 Sensitive Information, Source Code, etc. in Web Dir 1990 Easy 7 Static Credentials Contained in Client 1980 Easy 8 Domain Name Service (DNS) Cache Poisoning 2008 Medium 9 Aggressive Mode IKE Handshake Support 2001 Easy Exposed Service Version Issues (Buffer Overflows) 1996 Hard 10 Confidential Conclusions • Attackers are using old vulnerabilities • Attackers are using new vulnerabilities (not a contradiction!) • Attackers know they won’t be detected • Organizations do not know what they own or how their data flows • Blind trust in 3rd parties is a huge liability • Fixing new/buzz issues, but not fixing basic/old issues • In 2010, take a step back before moving forward Confidential Compliance Mandates and Data Protection Compliance Mandates PCI DSS HIPAA Data Type Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (2004, 2006) Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act (1996) Credit Card Data PHI: Protected Health Information Privacy & Security Rules (2003) GLBA SOX Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (1999) Financial Services Modernization Act NPPI: Non-Public Personal Information Financial Records Intellectual Property Sarbanes-Oxley Act (2002) Sections 404 and 302 FERPA Family Educational Rights & Privacy Act (1974) Student Records ITAR International Traffic in Arms Regulations (US Dept of State) Military & Defense Related IP on the US Munitions List FISMA Federal Information Security Management Act (2002) Data Security and Audit Standards for US Government and Contractors Title 21 CFR Part 11 US Food & Drug Administration Regulation Electronic records and signatures US State Data Privacy California SB 1386 44 states (as of June 2008) Customer Data Protection Breach notification to customers Confidential Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) Six Goals, Twelve Requirements PCI DSS requirements Build and maintain a secure network Protect cardholder data Maintain a vulnerability management program Implement strong access control measures Regularly monitor and test networks Maintain an information security policy 1. Install and maintain a firewall configuration to protect cardholder data 2. Do not use vendor-supplied defaults for system passwords and other security parameters 3. Protect stored cardholder data 4. Encrypt transmission of cardholder data across open, public networks 5. Use and regularly update anti-virus software or programs 6. Develop and maintain secure systems and applications 7. Restrict access to cardholder data by business need-to-know 8. 9. Assign a unique ID to each person with computer access Restrict physical access to cardholder data 10. Track and monitor all access to network resources and cardholder data 11. Regularly test security systems and processes 12. Maintain a policy that addresses information security for employees and contractors Confidential Why the PCI-DSS is Successful? Increased awareness Focus on protection of cardholder data Standardized controls accepted by all card brands Eradication of prohibited data storage Continual improvements and updates to the standard • Evolution of the standard • Based on information gathered and trends identified in postcompromise forensic investigations Confidential The Global Remediation Plan Rank Strategic Initiative 1 Perform and Maintain a Complete Asset Inventory; Decommission Old Systems 2 Monitor Third Party Relationships 3 Perform Internal Segmentation 4 Rethink Wireless 5 Encrypt Your Data 6 Investigate Anomalies 7 Educate Your Staff 8 Implement and Follow a Software Development Life Cycle (SDLC) 9 Lock Down User Access 10 Use Multifactor Authentication Every Where Possible Confidential E-Commerce Best Practices • Network Vulnerability Scanning • Penetration Testing • Application Testing • SSL Certificates • Web Site Seals • Patches and Network Security • User Awareness and Training Confidential Conclusion Best Practices Checklist Have you tested security? Are your SSL or EV SSL certificates valid and not expiring during the holiday season? Are your Web site seals valid and up to date? Have you obtained all patches and are the patches up-to-date? Do you know what and who are using your network? Confidential Resources • Trustmarks http://www.ecommerce-guide.com/solutions/advertising/article.php/3860526 • Trustwave’s Global Security Report 2010 https://www.trustwave.com/whitePapers.php • SANS 2009 Cyber Security Report http://www.sans.org/top-cyber-security-risks/ • SANS NewsBites Vol. 12 Num. 13 – Business Customer Sues Bank http://www.sans.org/newsletters/#newsbites • Bank Sues Customer http://www.bankinfosecurity.com/articles.php?art_id=2132 Confidential Questions?