Data protection is never
more vital than in the
world of health care,
where sensitive and
life-impacting data is
the cornerstone of
medicine. More than 3,600
physicians in 26 states
turn to our company for
outsourced claims
reimbursement management,
making backup and
recovery as critical as
the reliable Linux
platform.
Spooked at the thought of
an Oracle-PeopleSoft
combination to the point
of considering playing
white knight, IBM has now
allied directly with
PeopleSoft, getting it to
promise to standardize
its applications on IBM's
WebSphere middleware.
Late Friday night,
Scotland Yard released a
statement officially
confirming the arrest of
a 20-year-old-man in
connection with the
hacking of Cisco's
network that resulted in
the theft of 800MB of its
primary operating system.
The code found its was
onto servers in the
Netherlands and Russia.
News of the arrest
heightens corporate
security concerns.
VERITAS Software is
celebrating its 15th
anniversary by reflecting
on the company's customer
service initiative, and
engineering bravado, both
of which have allowed
VERITAS to bring to 99%
of Fortune 500 Companies
its products. The
company's next computing
initiative is with grid
computing. IT
departments, according to
VERITAS, can save
tremendous resources
through automation of
systems.
One of most exciting
areas to emerge in
information security has
been honeynets. These
networks are designed to
be compromised in order
to capture all the tools
and activities of the
attackers. We had the
opportunity to talk with
members of the Honeynet
Project, a nonprofit
security research
organization, and the
group's founder, Lance
Spitzner, about their
latest book, Know Your
Enemy: Learning About
Security Threats, Second
Edition (Addison-Wesley).
We asked many questions
and discovered some
surprising truths about
security. Read on for the
rest of the story.
Microsoft has released an
XP update with advanced
security technologies and
has urged Windows XP
users to turn on
Automatic Updates to get
consistent security
updates. However, IBM has
told its users not to
install the Windows XP
update.
SYS-CON Media is inviting
BEA, Borland, IBM, JBoss,
JOnAS, Macromedia,
Microsoft, Oracle, Orion,
Sun, and Sybase to an
'Application Server
Shoot-Out' at the
upcoming Web Services
Edge Conference & Expo,
in Boston next February.
The shootout will be a
live competition aimed at
finding out which app
servers support the
latest WS-I standards and
how they compare in terms
of how many transactions
they can handle, how many
lines of code they
require, how they react
to simulated network and
hardware failures and a
whole range of other
metrics.
Dell on Thursday came in
with solid numbers for
its second quarter ended
July 30 casting a long
dark shadow over
Hewlett-Packard's
pre-announcement earlier
in the day and
underscoring the fact
that HP's problems are of
its own making, not an
industry thing.
It's a problem as old as
networked computing.
Consider two
applications. They
negotiate a level of
trust. How can that trust
- or security context -
be transferred to a third
application, one that may
exist in an entirely
different security domain
from the first?
The year-old Mozilla
Foundation, home to the
AOL-dispossessed
mozilla.org and the
next-generation Firefox
alternate browser, is
going to start paying
cash bounties to people
who identify and report
security issues in its
software. The AOL/Mitch
Kapor-financed non-profit
got oversight for the
Mozilla browser, which
has had its problems
developing an active open
source development
community, after AOL cut
its direct ties with the
one-time Netscape unit.
'The Google search engine
experienced slowness for
a short period of time
earlier today because of
the MyDoom virus, which
flooded major search
engines with automated
searches,' said a Google,
Inc. statement yesterday.
'A small number of users
and networks that have
the MyDoom virus have
been affected for a
longer period of time,'
it continued, adding that
at no point was the
Google Web site
significantly impaired.
As reported here already
yesterday, the Cabir
virus - the world's first
'wireless worm' - does
very little damage to the
Series 60 phones it
infects, apart from
copying three files into
a hidden directory and
seriously reducing
battery life. Further
reports have confirmed
yesterday's 'low risk'
rating, both for home and
corporate phone users.
Security vulnerabilities
have been discovered in
Oracle E-Business Suite.
These vulnerabilities may
allow a knowledgeable and
malicious user to execute
unauthorized procedures
or SQL inside the
database.
First chipmakers like
Transmeta and AMD say
they are working to make
their microprocessors
capable of protecting
computers from virus and
worm attacks, now Red Hat
joins in - based on a
prototype from Intel -
and will start
incorporating 'No
eXecute' (NX) to help
prevent buffer overflows.
Microsoft plans on
training 500,000 people
in security related
matters over the next
twelve months. In a
relatively calm keynote
by Ballmer standards,
Microsoft's CEO was
nevertheless upbeat about
the future, saying: 'I
think the next ten years
will bring more positive
change and innovation out
of our industry than the
last ten years.'
A recent increase in
malicious activity on the
Internet, including the
development of attack
tools and exploit code,
has resulted in an
automated attack against
computer users in the
form of a worm identified
as 'W32.Sasser.worm'
('Sasser').
As anticipated Web-wide
since last week, Google
just filed for its IPO -
a $2.7 billion offering
that ranks as one of the
largest ever. Last year's
profits, according to IPO
papers filed with the
Securities and Exchange
Commission, were $105.5
million on revenue of
$961.8 million, up from
$9.6 million on revenue
of $347.8 million in
2002.
Linux folks tend to have
a better eye on security.
I realize that's an
overwhelmingly general
and wide-sweeping
statement, but that's my
opinion. I've been
working with Linux for a
very long time, and most
of the other users in the
community tend to be
highly technical and thus
aware of many of the
security concerns facing
the networked world
today.
In a speeech intended to
serve us a wake-up call
to anyone relying on the
'many eyes' that look at
the Linux source code to
quickly find any
subversions, the CEO of
Green Hills Software last
week reminded his
audience how UNIX's
creator Ken Thompson
installed a back door in
the binary code of UNIX
that automatically added
his user name and
password to every UNIX
system - a secret he
revealed only 14 years
later.
'Security is as big and
important a challenge as
any our industry has ever
tackled,' wrote Bill
Gates in his latest
'Executive E-mail' to
Microsoft's customers
worldwide. 'It is not a
case of simply fixing a
few vulnerabilities and
moving on. Reducing the
impact of viruses and
worms to an acceptable
level requires
fundamentally new
thinking about software
quality, continuous
improvement in tools and
processes, and ongoing
investments in resilient
new security technologies
designed to block
malicious or destructive
software code before it
can wreak havoc,' he
continued.
In what may or may not be
just a high-tech April
Fool, Google says it's
launching a free e-mail
service, leveraging
Google search technology
to automatically organize
and find messages, and
coming with a free
gigabyte of storage.
Since 1986, the
environmental
organization Greenpeace
UK has relied on e-mail
to support its campaigns,
but its existing servers
couldn't cope, so it has
turned to a Linux-based
SAN solution to guarantee
that its environmental
work can continue
electronically and
reliably.
The data exchanged in
business-to-business
(B2B) messages is often
sensitive and requires
protection. Secure Socket
Layer (SSL) provides
protection at the
transport level through
the confidentiality of
data exchanged between
two endpoints.
As we move from the
'Hello World' days of Web
services toward
development that can
truly support the
enterprise, there are
some advanced functional
requirements for Web
services, including
secure messaging,
reliable messaging, and
Web service policies.
Since interoperability is
the 'Holy Grail' of XML
and Web services, we must
maintain this
interoperability while
supporting such advanced
Web service
functionalities.
Ineffectual corporate
management has given a
great gift to
programmers, system
administrators, and CIOs
- endless corporate
accounting scandals. Our
federal government has
not missed this
scandalous behavior as
they have passed an
extraordinarily strong,
far-reaching law to
contend with financial
fraud.
Concerns about security
are cited as the single
largest barrier to rapid
Web services adoption.
Yet most Web services
today are fairly
straightforward
point-to-point
integrations that can be
securely implemented
using only digital
certificates and the
Secure Sockets Layer
(SSL) protocol.
At first glance, using
open-source software for
a firewall or other
security application
seems counterintuitive,
even absurd. Why would a
corporation use code
that's available to
anyone - hackers,
cyber-terrorists,
disgruntled employees -
to protect their most
vital information assets?
Yet that's what's
happening at places like
Stanford University, EDS,
and Los Alamos National
Labs, to name but a few
of the many organizations
using open-source
security software.
There are many concerns
surrounding the security
of Java applets and
applications downloaded
from the Internet. But
because Java developers
placed a lot of
importance on security
from the start, Java is
the preferred technology
for use in networked
environments. When Java's
security features are
implemented properly,
Java programs are safe
and can be downloaded to
your computer without any
security risk.
IT groups need to be able
to consider adopting new
backup software for many
good reasons. New
software might have
features and benefits the
company needs. The curren
Unlike older spam
filters, in which the
author programs the
characteristics of spam,
statistical filtering
automatically chooses the
characteristics (or
'features')
This article is an
excerpt from Risk
Management for Computer
Security: Protecting
Your Network &
Information Assets.
Printed with permission
from Butterworth-Heinem