Recap: the Pros & Cons
Back in June we had an awesome segment of Infosec VC 2012 entitled, “Hacktivism: What, Why, and How to Protect Against It,” lead by Gregory Nowak, Head Researcher at ISF (Information Security Forum) and ISACA Security Advisory Group and Peter Wood , CEO of First Base Technology and also of ISACA. So I thought I’d attend the bulk of the Infosec VC 2012 conferences now in August. What follows is my notes on some of the presentations for those that are interested…
The Disconnect Between Managers and Technicians
Product managers and corporate executives all seem to view security in a macro sense and often don’t fully grasp or care about the minute details of data security, such was illustrated at the 2012 Infosecurity Virtual Conference. These big shot corporate types and project managers are great for selling security solutions developed by a company’s IT department to the company’s administrators. But their lack of “street level” knowledge leave a lot to be desired.
Take the keynote presentation, Data Security and Compliance in an Evolving Data Center, by Derek Tumulak (VP of Vormetric). He was extremely intelligent and understood a lot of core concepts. A few positives of his presentation included: overview of virtualization and how it’s used in data centers (globally speaking), cloud computing and associated models, the importance of mobile security and how one breach could potentially mean disaster for an insecure organization, encryption management (how and when to use encryption as a last resort) and so on.
But Mr. Tumulak failed to identify actual instances of said compromises or how an organization should safeguard their systems on a technical level.
Instead he said, hackers, by and large, have been “[s]tealing information to sell it on the black market,” which isn’t necessarily true. Corporate espionage is big but it isn’t everything. Given the rise of Hacktivism I believe a strong number of attacks are conducted by those with specific ideological views they wish to convey (Anonymous attacks against Sony to protest the prosecution of a PS3 modder and other similar attacks). Also many wish to highlight security flaws to that company and, some, see what they can get by exploiting such systems (sheer curiosity).
While I can’t claim to know every technology out there, I understand this to be a very large weakness in the corporate environment: the disconnect between the inner workings of data security and the project managers that organize teams to implement the solution. Is the solution to make all corporate executives network technicians? Obviously not but a middle ground must be met in order to appropriately data. Big pictures are wonderful but if you aren’t going to get your hands dirty or at least explain past instances of exploitation and what steps can be made to protect against such problems, you’re just ranting. Good for sales, bad for business.
Unlike conventions such as HOPE, Defcon and Black Hat Briefings (which does have a fair amount of “big picture” talks, as corporations only seem to understand that method), a lot of corporate events are presented in this kind of “dry” way at other sessions. The Infosecurity Magazine US Summer Virtual Conference 2012 was full of this. Some, but not all, of the presentations were like this.
You’d think a lot of these executives were more interested in PowerPoint or Keynote than coding.
“Providing Smart Security for Smart Devices,” by Mike Sapien and Marc Vael) was very dry and the solutions discussed were obvious ones. Anyone with smartphone knowledge would have been eons ahead of these guys. The Program Director of ISACA was a little more informative here as far as how corporate employees need to safeguard their mobile data.
Unfortunately almost 99% of the conference was targeted at CTOs, VPs, and other corporate audiences. A number of presenters stated that things that were “highly technical ” wouldn’t be useful; most people gloss over it. As such the tone of the conference was “business minded” and technology was discussed in general terms. As such it didn’t really serve to impress the tech savvy.
I really liked Theresa Payton’s address. As the Fmr. Whitehouse CIO and head of her own security company she has a warning to companies: focus on the new emerging digital landscape. She spoke about the important role social media plays in computing today.
Companies today must adopt social media, in her opinion, but they must also adopt a strong sense of security if they want to address its inherent security concerns.
So in conclusion of the cons, it wasn’t a conference detailing the finer points of information security such as firewall and network group policies, AD flaws and loopholes, social engineering techniques, encryption standards in depth, code exploits & tightening, wireless security (ARP table monitoring for MITM protection), and a myriad of other technical details. It was mostly by corporate-types for corporate-types.
A forum friend of mine actually did tell me “it’s like this. We just go to these things to get our credits for our CISSP,” after I said I wasn’t really interested in the bulk of the conferences. So I guess I’m over-analyzing the conference.
Onto the pros…
Best Presentation: “How to Protect Your Organization from a DDoS Attack”
Panelists
Michael Singer, VP of Security for AT&T
Prof. David Stupples, CCySS, University of London
At Glance
Prof. David Stupples of the Centre for Cyber Security Sciences (CCySS), City University of London was one of the greatest speakers for me. He discusses malware, DDoS attacks in-depth using past examples of such attacks are conducted. Botnets that harvest data and move through proxy servers to mask the identities of attackers are of significant concern to CCySS.
The professor explained how Botnets work and how they are analyzed before being sent to anti-virus/malware companies for safeguarding their client’s systems. He explained how analysis is conducted using mathematics when analyzing botnets in CCySS-made honeypots and how CCySS has a track record of doing just that.
Prof. David Stupples also discussed the limits of Botnets and possible preventative methods such as:
* Providing security/OS upgrades can mitigate against such malicious code exploitation.
* Vendors using honeypots to analyze known botnets/malware can help.
* IP/DNS filtering is effective to some degree against Botnets (and the Botnets ability to connect “home” to its masters). Note that I attribute this to the way Alureon/DNSChanger was thwarted by ISPs despite the FBI’s warnings to the general public. ISPs were able to compensate for this at their level and ensure DNS didn’t resolve where they weren’t supposed to.
* Malware companies examing Botnet/malicious code fingerprints for quick identification
* Reverse engineering search engine spiders to identify threats immediately
That panel included other security professionals and their insights into the matter of software attacks, viruses, malware and DDoS attacks. They stress the importance of different countries working together to analyze, spot and thwart such attacks. Prof. David Stupples said that such international efforts have helped catch a number of attackers in the UK. He stressed the need for more international law enforcement support.
Michael Singer, Executive Director of Security for AT&T, was also among my top favorite speakers. He discussed how the safeguarding of the internet is essential but not at the expense of individual freedoms, which many people enjoy. He stressed the importance of the need for a global security organization, like Prof. Stupples, but also warns that such an organization must make sure not to curb individual freedoms.
Interestingly Mr. Singer also discussed mobile security and how Android, in particular, can be used for for such exploitation as it’s an amazing platform with the power of a small computer.
To see the presentation, click here to register and go to the conference page.
Glitches
– Poor Audio – There are a lot of problems with audio. The audio was pretty bad. But all of these conferences generally have low quality audio.
– Slide/video track bar – When watching older/archived sessions, moving this bar to skip or go back usually requires a refresh of the entire presentation page. Which generally stinks.