Security is not a Product You Buy
By Erik Petersen
One of the most common management mistakes regarding
security is to think security is a product you buy. Corporations know
they must spend money to secure their information assets, but they often
misspend their money on a hodgepodge of security products, leaving gaping
holes for hackers and insiders to walk right through.
You must have a Security Policy
Any company of any size must have a
security policy. If there is no policy, there is no security strategy,
and without a strategy, departments will aimlessly purchase security products
to satisfy narrowly focused tactical needs. A good security policy clearly
spells out the security goals for everyone in the organization, but it
spells out the goals broadly.
For example, every company should have
a password policy. The policy should state the need for password complexity,
what the complexity entails, when the passwords expire, and password storage
(not on a sticky pad in the top drawer, or under the keyboard!) But there
are many ways to implement a password policy like this, so the policy
should not go into details regarding implementation. Implementation will
vary with the technology. For example, password maintenance will be handled
differently in a Public Key Infrastructure than it will be on a workstation.
A policy should not go into hardware specific details. Hardware changes
all the time. The need for a certain level of password protection does
not.
A corporation should see its security
policy as an opportunity to explain to everyone, in every division, what
the unifying information security strategy is, and then leave it to those
divisions to develop the right tactics to satisfy the strategy.
The Organization must have Security
Awareness
Security policies are useless if they
are being distributed to a people who do not know anything about security,
or do not care. Strategies will fail when the managers who must develop
the tactics try to do so in a vacuum. The answer to this problem is simple-education.
Consider this real world example; you pour all of your resources into
enterprise wide security applications-PKI, IDS's, Firewalls, etc.-but
neglect training and awareness. One day someone with a very convincing
story calls a secretary and asks her for a password for the VPN. She wants
to be helpful, so she gives it out. This is called "social engineering"
in the hacker world, and it happens all the time. Most hackers learn how
to sound convincing, talk particular company jargon, and impersonate superiors.
A security awareness program should be
well advertised and distributed, even to the most general users. The entire
company must be kept up to date on new policies, standards, and new procedures,
and when these new procedures are implemented, the users must be trained.
Risk Analysis and Risk Assessment
Before your company can develop a security
strategy, it must understand what needs to be protected. What are your
key assets? What is the company mission? What information must be secured
to protect those assets and ensure the mission can be accomplished? After
these questions are answered, a comprehensive risk evaluation is essential.
A risk evaluation should allow an organization to see:
- Important information assets and their relative
values
- Threats to those assets
- Security requirements
- Current protection strategies and procedures
- Vulnerabilities to the organization
It is critical to understand what assets
need to be protected, the internal and external threats to those assets,
and an understanding of where the organization is most vulnerable. Proper
risk analysis allows for focused risk assessment. Risk assessment should
be comprehensive, and touch upon all elements of intrusion, from network
based penetration, to social engineering.
Technology Evaluation
Regretfully, there is no way around this
fact. If you do want security it is very likely that you will need to
acquire security technology. Someday, security will be built into technology,
but that day seems years away. Any enterprise system will need to be secured
with some of the standard technology tools such as firewalls, virtual
private networks, vulnerability scanning tools, intrusion detection systems,
access control tools, public key infrastructure, encryption, etc. But
products are not enough, and they do not, in and of themselves, buy you
security. All too often we have consulted for companies that have spent
a sizable portion of their budget on security technology that they did
not implement correctly. On one consulting engagement we found that just
one misconfiguration allowed a straight shot from the internet, through
two firewalls, and right into the precious interior IBM AS/400 Mainframe,
bypassing the intrusion detection systems. Another typical technology
mistake is not using the existing foundation to add layers of security.
In other words, it is a waste to spend money on good security technology
only to surround it with old, easily penetrated, cracked systems, which
expose the expensive new technology to easy intrusion. Routers and operating
systems, for example, should be hardened or native encryption enabled.
What is the key to Security?
Process, Process, Process! If you are
going to take securing your information assets seriously, you will have
to depend on a strong management process, education, assessment, awareness,
and, yes, sound technology. Security must be an ongoing iterative cycle;
creating new processes, editing old ones, developing new tactics to address
new threats. And most important of all, security must include everyone
in the organization, from top to bottom.
Unless information security is a corporate
and management goal, turned into a process, and then engineered into the
enterprise, a company exposes its mission and its assets to considerable
risk.

© 2006 Polar Cove
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