Securosis Blog

Incite 5/30/2012: Low Hanging Fruit

Mike Rothman · May 30, 2012

As you might have noticed, there was no Incite last week. Turns out the Boss and I were in Barcelona to celebrate 15 years of wedded bliss. We usually run about 6 months late on everything, so the timing was perfect. We had 3 days to ourselves and then two other couples from ATL joined us for the rest of the week. We got to indulge our appreciation for art – hitting the Dali, Miro, and Picasso museums. We also saw some Gaudi structures that are just mind-boggling. Then we joked about how…

Few terms strike as much dread in the hearts of security professionals as key management. Those two simple words evoke painful memories of massive PKI failures, with millions spent to send encrypted email to the person in the adjacent cube. Or perhaps it recalls the head-splitting migraine you got when assigned to reconcile incompatible proprietary implementations of a single encryption standard. Or memories of half-baked product implementations that worked fine on in isolation on a single…

We are pleased to announce the availability of a new research paper, Understanding and Selecting Database Security Platforms. And this paper covers most of the facets for database security today. We started to refresh our original Database Activity Monitoring paper in October 2011, but stopped short when our research showed that platform evolution has stopped converging – and has instead diverged again to embrace independent visions of database security, and splintering customer requirements. We…

In this post I want to show how masking works, focusing on how masking platforms move and manipulate data. I originally intended to start with architectures and mechanics of masking systems; but it should be more helpful to start by describing the different masking models, how data flows through different systems, and the advantages and disadvantages of each. I will comment on common data sources and destinations, and the issues to consider when considering masking technology. There are many…

Rich here.

One of the more fascinating – and unexpected – aspects of migrating from martial arts to triathlon as my primary sport has been importance role of metrics, and how they have changed my views on security.

Before I start today’s post, thank you for all the letters saying that people are looking forward to this series. We have put a lot of work into this research to ensure we capture the state of currently available technology, and we are eager to address this under-served market. As always, we encourage blog comments because they help readers understand other viewpoints that we may not reflect in the posts proper. And for the record, I’m not knocking Twitter debates – they are useful as well, but…

Today we start our latest blog series, which we are calling Evolving Endpoint Malware Detection: Dealing with Advanced and Targeted Attacks – a logical next step from much of the research we have already done around the evolution of malware and emerging controls to deal with it. We started a few years back by documenting Endpoint Security Fundamentals, and more recently looked at network-based approaches to detect malware at the perimeter. Finally we undertook the Herculean task of decomposing…

Continuous Learning

Mike Rothman · May 18, 2012

I referred back to the Pragmatic CSO tips when I started the Vulnerability Management Evolution series (the paper hit yesterday, by the way) and there was some good stuff in there, so let me once again dust off those old concepts and highlight another one. This one dealt with the reality that you are a business person, not a security person.

Friday Summary: May 18, 2012

Adrian Lane · May 18, 2012

A friend told me this week they were on Pinterest. I responded, “I’m sorry! How long does your employer allow you to take off?” I was seriously thinking this was something like paternity leave or one of those approved medical absence programs. I really wondered when he got sick, and what his prognosis was. He told me, “No, I’m on Pinterest to market my new idea.” WTF? Turns out it’s not a medical sabbatical, but another social media ‘tool’ for sharing photos and stuff.

Organizations have traditionally viewed vulnerability scanners as tactical products, largely commoditized and only valuable around audit time. How useful is a 100-page vulnerability report to an operations person trying to figure out what to fix next? Although those 100-page reports make auditors smile, as they offer a nice listing of audit deficiencies to address in the findings of fact. But the tide is definitely turning. We see a clear shift from a largely compliance-driven orientation to a…