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The Marketleap Report
Vol. 1 - Issue #3 - April
6, 2001
Who's Watching the Server? - Security
and the Web
By Keith Boswell
As the guardian of 40 million+ e-mail
addresses and records of 3.5 billion transactions
conducted by over 90 million households, DoubleClick
is one of the largest collectors of consumer tracking
information on the web.
DoubleClick also runs one of the leading
online advertising networks, selling ad space for
thousands of web sites. In the past week, they have
been in the headlines three times - all for being
compromised due to ill-intent hackers.
At first, DoubleClick denied there
were any problems. However, some customers were unable
to access their DoubleClick accounts. By Friday, DoubleClick
issued a statement confirming a story from the Wall
Street Journal that the company had shutdown some
of its servers to investigate the attacks.
"While the attempt to access
our systems appear to be mischievous in nature we
take seriously any attempt to compromise the security
of our systems," said Jules Polonetsky, the company's
chief privacy officer, in the statement. "We
do not believe that there has been any serious impact
to our networks but we are working aggressively to
ensure the integrity of our systems."
Each of the holes that the hackers
were exploiting to enter their systems could have
been sealed. Each break-in occurred because DoubleClick
had not installed security patches to their Microsoft
NT web servers that had been available for months.
In DoubleClick's statement to the press, they mentioned
that the patches would be applied now that they were
aware of the vulnerability.
DoubleClick ensures the web community
that they go to great lengths to protect consumer
privacy from unethical commercial use. They do not
appear prepared to defend that same information from
criminals looking to steal it.
The lines between the two should be
indistinguishable. We would never want criminals to
have the information because of the monetary damage
the information loss would cause. Yet DoubleClick
is clearly more concerned with defending the information
from those who would sell their lists to marketers.
Are the marketers really more of a threat than the
criminals?
In the past week, another security
glitch occurred at Microsoft. Someone posed as a Microsoft
employee and received two digital certificates from
Verisign. Digital certificates are used with secure
web transactions to prove the identity of the sender.
They are meant to ensure you receive reliable downloads
from secure sources.
In effect, someone has the ability
to look just like Microsoft to an unsuspecting web
user. That web user could download and then execute
a piece of potentially damaging software code that
they believe Microsoft created.
Microsoft was quick to issue a patch
for the problem, but look to the example of large
companies like DoubleClick that never follow up with
patches to imagine how unsuccessful their notification
might be.
If you want to gain an idea of just
how bad the problem has become just listen to some
of the findings from the CanSecWest security conference
that wrapped up in Canada this week.
Lance Spitzner works as a security
engineer for Sun Microsystems. He is also the founder
of the Honeynet Project. The Honeynet Project places
unprotected servers on the Internet set up with their
operating systems default installation. They use these
machines to understand the techniques that hackers
use and to see how exposed default software settings
leave web servers to attack.
On average, the machines they place
on the Internet will be hacked within 8 hours. Hackers
are now employing automated scanning software and
"aware" worms that always travel the web looking for
new residence. Compare that with computers connected
through universities. They will often be under outside
control within 45 minutes of being placed on the Internet.
Another highlight of CanSecWest was
the unveiling of a new cloaking technique for software
assaults on highly protected servers. Sophisticated
defensive software has been written that searches
for the patterns that emerge when hackers try to breach
networks. The military, banking sector and other highly
classified networks that sit behind a stone fortress
of code employ this software to protect their assets.
The new technique allows a hacker
to deceive the software looking for patterns. It fools
the other software into not "seeing" the
intrusion. By throwing a random pattern back at the
protecting layer, the hacker is able to slip into
the network and begin his assault without worry of
being detected.
A survey by The Computer Security
Institute found losses of $378 million from the 186
companies that were able to quantify their damage
from computer crimes in 2001. The year isn't even
half way over.
As business online continues to evolve,
companies must take security seriously. Every company
has locks on the doors of their offices. Some have
sophisticated security systems to halt intruders from
breaking in. But most don't have a single computer
security expert on staff.
Until it, the hack that stops your
business, happens.
With the amount of information that
companies now share through the web, this seems unnerving.
Intranets and extranets are especially sensitive because
they contain intellectual property and details about
client relationships. The file cabinet containing
valuable data isn't readily accessible, so why is
the entire network?
Companies must create the role of
a Chief Security Officer. If you conduct business
online, you at least need a diligent policing role
that will ensure your machines are up to date with
software patches. Beyond that companies must reassess
and explore how they are connected to the various
networks they do business through.
Your friends would have a field day
if you told them your car was stolen because you left
it unlocked while you went out to eat downtown. What
will your customers and the media say when they find
out your business is vulnerable and has been exploited?
Confidence flushes down the drain faster than an awkward
teen blushes. The damages could be minimal, but the
perception is very real. If you aren't watching your
web server, someone else already is.
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