Securosis Blog

Friday Summary - September 4, 2009

Adrian Lane · September 4, 2009

As much as I love what I do, it’s turned me into a cynical bastard. And no, I don’t mean skeptical, which we’ve talked about before (the application of critical thinking to determine truth), but truly cynical (everyone is a right bastard who will fleece you for everything you’re worth if given the opportunity).

Reporting for compliance and security, job scheduling, and integration with other business systems are the topics this post will focus on. These are the features outside the core scanning function that make managing a database vulnerability assessment product easier. Most database assessment vendors have listed these features for years, but they were implemented in a marketing “check the box” way, not really to provide ease of use and not particularly intended to help customers. Actually, that…

Sentrigo and MS SQL Server Vulnerability

Adrian Lane · September 2, 2009

We do not cover press releases. We are flooded with them and, quite frankly, most are not very interesting. You can only read “We’re the market leader in Mumblefoo” or “We’re the only vendor to offer revolutionary widget X” so many times without spitting up. Neither is true, and even if it was, I still wouldn’t care. This morning I am making an exception to the rule as I got a press release that caught my attention: it announces a database vulnerability, touches on issues of vulnerability…

Musings on Data Security in the Cloud

Rich · September 1, 2009

So I’ve written about data security, and I’ve written about cloud security, thus it’s probably about time I wrote something about data security in the cloud.

Friday Summary - August 28, 2009

Adrian Lane · August 28, 2009

I got my first CTO promotion at the age of 29, and though I was very strong in technology, it’s shocking how little I knew back them in terms of process, communication, presentation, leadership, business, and a dozen other important things. However, I was fortunate to learn one management lesson early that really helped me define the role. It turned out that my personal productivity was no longer relevant in the big picture. Intead by taking the time to communicate vision, intent, process, and…

OWASP and SunSec Announcement

Adrian Lane · August 28, 2009

Rich wanted me to put up a reminder that he will be speaking at OWASP next Tuesday (September 1, 2009). I’d say where this was located, but I honestly don’t know. He said it was a secret.

Burden of Online Fraud

Adrian Lane · August 27, 2009

One of my favorite posts of the last week, and one of the scariest, is Brian Krebs’ Washington Post article on Businesses Are Reluctant to Report Online Fraud. This is not a report on a single major bank heist, but instead what many of us have worried about for a long time in Internet fraud: automated, distributed and repeatable theft. The worry has never been the single million-dollar theft, but scalable, repeatable theft of electronic funds. We are going to be hearing a lot more about this in…

Technically speaking, the market segment we are talking about is “Database Vulnerability Assessment”. You might have noticed that we titled this series “Database Assessment”. No, it was not just because the titles of these posts are too long (they are). The primary motivation for this name was to stress that this is not just about vulnerabilities and security. While the genesis of this market is security, compliance with regulatory mandates and operations policies are what drives the buying…

I just finished reading a TechTarget editorial by Bob Russo, the General Manager of the PCI Council where he responded to an article by Eric Ogren Believe it or not, I don’t intend this to be some sort of snarky anti-PCI post. I’m happy to see Mr. Russo responding directly to open criticism, and I’m hoping he will see this post and maybe we can also get a response.

We Know How Breaches Happen

Rich · August 26, 2009

I first started tracking data breaches back in December of 2000 when I received my very first breach notification email, from Egghead Software. When Egghead wen bankrupt in 2001 and was acquired by Amazon, rather than assuming the breach caused the bankruptcy, I did some additional research and learned they were on a downward spiral long before their little security incident. This broke with the conventional wisdom floating around the security rubber-chicken circuit at the time, and was a fine…