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Security
June
9, 2005
Speed
remediation key for evaluating endpoint security solution
Gregory Toto
UNITED
STATES -- According to a 2004 CSI/FBI study, disruptions
from recent security incidents, such as Nimda, Blaster
and SoBig, as well as other vulnerabilities cost the
average enterprise over US $2 million in direct losses.
To mitigate these security threats, enterprises and
government agencies spent over US $20 billion in 2004
on the problem of Internet security vulnerabilities,
according to IDC. Gartner estimates that another US
$11 billion will be spent on broader systems management
solutions. Unfortunately, most security investments
leave mobile endpoints at risk. This is because mobile
computers are extremely difficult to manage with traditional
security measures and can become vulnerable in many
ways, including:
-
Failure to maintain current security configuration
and patch levels as the computer was not in the office
or on the network at the right time to receive them;
-
Corrupted patches, which can occur if a current version
of a DLL is overwritten by an older vulnerable version
when the user installs or reinstalls software;
-
Weak security settings, which are often the result
of a user changing settings when attempting to get
the computer to communicate with the Internet on a
home network or a customer's internal network; and
-
The growing number of mobile workers, which can compound
problems and compromise your network, when communication
is re-established with the network.
Now
the question is -- how vulnerable are you? We've come
up with seven signs that can help any enterprise evaluate
how secure it is at the endpoint.
Sign #1: You don't know what software is currently
installed and running or how your mobile computers are
configured.
Enterprise administrators are faced with substantial
challenges when attempting to collect and view timely
information about the computers. The most common method
is through existing systems management infrastructures.
However, these solutions are limited in their ability
to provide the information that administrators need
and administrators are often forced to rely on data
that is weeks or even months old.
The first step to overcoming this endpoint security
challenge is to gain timely and comprehensive understanding
of the configuration of computers. Solutions are available
that allow administrators to identify properties, such
as the patch levels, anti-virus status coverage, security
configuration, running applications and services.
Sign #2: You rely on anti-virus and personal
firewall software as your total solution to endpoint
security.
According to Yankee Group, over 80 percent of enterprises
across Europe and North America experienced a worm or
virus incident during last year, despite significant
investments in anti-virus solutions. This is due to
significant challenges faced by administrators who struggle
to keep pace with the increasing number of virus signatures,
which are released in response to new vulnerabilities.
Network-based security configuration solutions can help
identify if antivirus and personal firewalls are enabled
and current, and remediate non-compliant computers where
necessary.
Sign #3: Your IT management and security tools
do not extend to your mobile computers and remote locations.
Endpoints outside the security perimeter represent one
of the fastest growing security threats to enterprises
today. To respond to this challenge, IT administrators
can choose from a number of agent-based solutions that
extend the benefits of network security capabilities
beyond the perimeter to remote and mobile workers. Agents
residing on mobile computers can detect and, in some
cases, remediate vulnerabilities and improper configurations
wherever they occur.
Sign #4: You can't enforce secure configuration
of all of your computers when they are on (and off)
your network.
In the increasingly mobile workplace, many workers don't
sit still long enough for IT to fix vulnerabilities
and update configurations on their laptops. As a result,
enterprises can no longer rely on traditional security
and management tools to ensure security throughout the
extended enterprise.
In
response to this growing need, new innovations have
been introduced that allow IT administrators to close
this gap by enforcing security configurations and best
practices when computers are disconnected from the network,
roaming outside the corporate LAN or connecting remotely.
Sign #5: You don't require and enforce current
and secure configuration when computers connect to your
network.
One of the most publicized endpoint security threats
is that of an infected laptop being introduced by a
contractor, consultant or employee who travels between
multiple networks.
Today, organisations can validate the secure state of
endpoints by enforcing the proper configuration and
security compliance before granting access to the network.
When a mobile computer connects, whether to the corporate
LAN or through a secure remote access solution, an endpoint
security system verifies, and if necessary, automatically
remediates the computer with the latest patches, firewall
and antivirus software according to policy, before connection.
Sign #6: Your mobile and remote users have administrative
rights on their computers.
Administrative rights are often granted to provide mobile
and remote users with the ability to install software
and change system settings. Often, this is done to allow
these users to self-service since they are out of office
for weeks or months at a time. But this level of access
exposes organisations to significant security risks,
and according to Yankee Group, granting extended rights
to end users can actually increase support costs by
10 percent.
To alleviate the threat of end users compromising the
security of endpoints, enterprises should deploy a management
infrastructure that can handle the unique requirements
of managing mobile and remote endpoints such as bandwidth
sensitivity, inventory discovery, software deployment,
patch management, and configuration enforcement for
intermittently connected endpoints. Administrative rights
should only be granted to only the employees who absolutely
require them to successfully perform their job functions.
Sign #7: Your discovery and remediation capabilities
can not stay ahead of the shrinking window of time between
published vulnerability and exploit in-the-wild.
Are you meeting your service levels for security remediation
- patch management, anti-virus updates, etc? Or are
your services levels defined by how quickly your existing
tools let you respond?
One of the most critical job functions of IT administrators
and information security staff is closing the window
from when a new vulnerability is announced and when
the threat has been mitigated. Unfortunately, this window
of opportunity is rapidly closing.
Speed of discovery and speed of remediation should be
at the top of any list of criteria for evaluating an
endpoint security solution.
BigFix Inc. exhibited at the Infosecurity Europe 2005
held during the 26th - 28th April 2005 at the Grand
Hall, Olympia. For more details about the event, please
log on to www.infosec.co.uk.
(The author is vice president, product management, BigFix)
Contact:
BigFix Inc.
Tel: +1-510-652-6700
gregory_toto@bigfix.com
www.bigfix.com
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