3. The combination of space, time, and strength that must be considered
as the basic elements of this theory of defense makes this a fairly
complicated matter. Consequently, it is not easy to find a fixed point
of departure.
β On War, Carl Von Clausewitz
The art of war teaches us to rely not on the likelihood of the enemy's
not coming, but on our own readiness to receive him; not on the
chance of his not attacking, but rather on the fact that we have
made our position unassailable.
βThe Art of War, Sun Tzu
4. β’ Before the widespread use of data processing equipment, the security of
information valuable to an organization was provided primarily by physical and
administrative means
β’ With the introduction of the computer, the need for automated tools for
protecting files and other information stored on the computer became evident
β’ Another major change that affected security is the introduction of distributed
systems and the use of networks and communications facilities for carrying
data between terminal user and computer and between computer and computer
β’ Computer security
β’ The generic name for the collection of tools designed to protect data and to thwart
hackers
β’ internet security (lower case βiβ refers to any interconnected collection of
network)
β’ Consists of measures to deter, prevent, detect, and correct security violations that
involve the transmission of information
Computer Security: Concept
5. ISSUES: Everything is moving into Digital
Education
Public Service
Banking
Devices
Also, everything is interconnected with others
6. IT Hot Issues: Cloud computing, Big Data, Internet of Things (IOT)
Internet of Things (IOT)
evolved from
M2M (Machine to Machine)
7. β’ Your refrigerator might be sending spam
β’ Between December 23, 2013 and January 6, 2014 Proofpoint
researchers detected a botnet that was aggressively mailing
malicious spam three times each day. Proofpoint believes the
450,000 IP-address strong spam botnet included over 100,000
IoT devices:
β’ "A more detailed examination suggested that while the majority
of mail was initiated by "expected" IoT devices such as
compromised home-networking devices (routers, NAS), there
was a significant percentage of attack mail coming from other
non-traditional sources, such as connected multi-media centers,
televisions and at least one refrigerator."
βProofPointβ Report (Jan 21, 2014)
8. A fridge full of spam: Hacked
domestic appliances send a
torrent of junk email
Monday 20 Jan 2014 10:24 pm
Fridges, TVs and hi-fis have been hacked and
used to launch hundreds of thousands of
malicious spam email attacks.
One botnet attack involved 750,000 emails sent
from 100,000 gadgets, including TVs, wi-fi
routers and at least one fridge, say internet
security experts at Proofpoint.
Many of these devices are poorly protected at
best and consumers have virtually no way to
detect or fix infections when they do occur,β said
David Knight, from Proofpoint.
βBotnets are already a major security concern
and the emergence of βthingbotsβ [things being
gadgets] may make the situation much worse.β
βProofPointβ Report (Jan 21, 2014)
9. More and more devices β from baby monitors to smoke
alarms to meat thermometers β are being connected
online as techies dream of an βinternet of thingsβ.
LG markets a fridge which sends a text when the milk
runs out.
Experts have long warned they are soft targets for
criminals, including speculation that a killer could strike
by hacking medical equipment.
Tim Keanini, of security firm Lancope, said: βEven
things you wear are on the network, adding to the target
your adversary will try and exploit.β
βProofPointβ Report (Jan 21, 2014)
10. Automobile Security
ο¬Automobile is nothing but only a computer
ο¬Korea University: demonstrate RPM control through
remote operation using mobile phone
ο¬Samsung set up a research program with Korea University
11. Iron, Kettle are used as a βSpy Micro-Chip Machineβ
Chinese appliances are shipping with Malware-distributing
WiFi chips (Geek.com, Oct. 29, 2013)
Spy micro-chips hook up to
wireless computer network to
spread malwares and spams,
sending data to remote
servers
12. β’ Multi screen: desktop, tablet, smart phone, smart TV, automobile,
refrigerator, etc..
β’ Smartphone becomes a security headache
β’ New devices: Google βGlassβ computer, iWatch
β’ Micro Devices: Ball Pen camcoder, USB camcode
N-Screen Mobile Office Micro Devices
New Threats: Micro Devices
16. Cyber Combat: Act of War
Taking the Cyberattack Threat Seriously
2012.7.20. President Obama, WSJ
the cyber threat to our nation is one of the most serious economic and national security
challenges we face. Computer systems in critical sectors of our economyβincluding
the nuclear and chemical industriesβare being increasingly targeted.
It doesn't take much to imagine the consequences of a successful cyber attack. In a
future conflict, an adversary unable to match our military supremacy on the battlefield
might seek to exploit our computer vulnerabilities here at home. Taking down vital
banking systems could trigger a financial crisis. The lack of clean water or
functioning hospitals could spark a public health emergency. And as we've seen in
past blackouts, the loss of electricity can bring businesses, cities and entire regions
to a standstill.
17. Computer
Security
βThe protection afforded to
an automated information
system in order to attain
the applicable objectives of
preserving the integrity,
availability, and
confidentiality of
information system
resources (includes
hardware, software,
firmware,
information/data, and
telecommunications)β
The NIST Computer Security
Handbook defines the term
computer security as:
18. β’ Data confidentiality
β’ Assures that private or confidential information is not made available or disclosed
to unauthorized individuals
β’ Privacy
β’ Assures that individuals control or influence what information related to them may
be collected and stored and by whom and to whom that information may be
disclosed
Confidentiality
β’ Data integrity
β’ Assures that information and programs are changed only in a specified and
authorized manner
β’ System integrity
β’ Assures that a system performs its intended function in an unimpaired manner, free
from deliberate or inadvertent unauthorized manipulation of the system
Integrity
β’ Assures that systems work promptly and service is not denied to authorized
users
Availability
Computer Security: Objectives
20. Authenticity
β’ Verifying that users are
who they say they are
and that each input
arriving at the system
came from a trusted
source
Accountability
β’ The security goal that
generates the
requirement for actions
of an entity to be traced
uniquely to that entity
Possible Additional Ojectives
21. β’ The loss could be expected to have a severe or
catastrophic adverse effect on organizational
operations, organizational assets, or individuals
Hi
gh
β’ The loss could be expected to have a
serious adverse effect on organizational
operations, organizational assets, or
individuals
Moderate
β’ The loss could be expected to
have a limited adverse effect on
organizational operations,
organizational assets, or
individuals
Low
Breaches of Security
Level of Impact
22. Confidentiality
Student grade
information is an asset
whose confidentiality is
considered to be highly
important by students
Regulated by the Family
Educational Rights and
Privacy Act (FERPA)
Integrity
Patient information
stored in a database β
inaccurate information
could result in serious
harm or death to a
patient and expose the
hospital to massive
liability
A Web site that offers a
forum to registered users
to discuss some specific
topic would be assigned a
moderate level of integrity
An example of a low-
integrity requirement is an
anonymous online poll
Availability
The more critical a
component or service, the
higher the level of
availability required
A moderate availability
requirement is a public
Web site for a university
An online telephone
directory lookup
application would be
classified as a low-
availability requirement
Examples of Security Requirements
23. β’ Security is not simple
β’ Potential attacks on the security
features need to be considered
β’ Procedures used to provide
particular services are often
counter-intuitive
β’ It is necessary to decide where
to use the various security
mechanisms
β’ Requires constant monitoring
β’ Is too often an afterthought
β’ Security mechanisms typically
involve more than a particular
algorithm or protocol
β’ Security is essentially a battle
of wits between a perpetrator
and the designer
β’ Little benefit from security
investment is perceived until a
security failure occurs
β’ Strong security is often viewed
as an impediment to efficient
and user-friendly operation
Computer Security: Challenges
24. β’ Security attack
β’ Any action that compromises the security of information
owned by an organization
β’ Security service
β’ A processing or communication service that enhances the
security of the data processing systems and the
information transfers of an organization
β’ Intended to counter security attacks, and they make use
of one or more security mechanisms to provide the
service
β’ Security mechanism
β’ A process (or a device incorporating such a process) that
is designed to detect, prevent, or recover from a security
attack
OSI Security Architecture
26. (1) Security Attack: Passive,
Active
β’A means of classifying security
attacks, used both in X.800 and RFC
4949, is in terms of passive attacks and
active attacks
β’A passive attack attempts to learn or
make use of information from the
system but does not affect system
resources
β’An active attack attempts to alter
system resources or affect their
operation
27. Passive Attacks
β’ Two types of passive
attacks are:
β’ The release of message
contents
β’ Traffic analysis
β’ Are in the nature of
eavesdropping on, or
monitoring of, transmissions
β’ Goal of the opponent is to
obtain information that is
being transmitted
28. β’ Involve some modification of the
data stream or the creation of a
false stream
β’ Difficult to prevent because of
the wide variety of potential
physical, software, and network
vulnerabilities
β’ Goal is to detect attacks and to
recover from any disruption or
delays caused by them
β’ Takes place when one entity
pretends to be a different entity
β’ Usually includes one of the other
forms of active attack
Masquerade
β’ Involves the passive capture of a
data unit and its subsequent
retransmission to produce an
unauthorized effect
Replay
β’ Some portion of a legitimate
message is altered, or messages
are delayed or reordered to
produce an unauthorized effect
Modification
of messages
β’ Prevents or inhibits the normal
use or management of
communications facilities
Denial of
service
(1) Security Attack : Active Attacks
30. β’ Defined by X.800 as:
β’ A service provided by a protocol layer of communicating open
systems and that ensures adequate security of the systems or of
data transfers
β’ Defined by RFC 4949 as:
β’ A processing or communication service provided by a system
to give a specific kind of protection to system resources
(2)Security Services
31. β’ Authentication
β’ Access control
β’ Data confidentiality
β’ Data integrity
β’ Nonrepudiation
(2)X.800 Security: Services
32. β’ Concerned with assuring that a communication is
authentic
β’ In the case of a single message, assures the recipient that
the message is from the source that it claims to be from
β’ In the case of ongoing interaction, assures the two
entities are authentic and that the connection is not
interfered with in such a way that a third party can
masquerade as one of the two legitimate parties
Two specific authentication services are defined in X.800:
β’ Peer entity authentication
β’ Data origin authentication
(2) Security Service: Authentication
33. β’ The ability to limit and control the access to host
systems and applications via communications links
β’ To achieve this, each entity trying to gain access must
first be indentified, or authenticated, so that access
rights can be tailored to the individual
(2) Security Service : Access Control
34. β’ The protection of transmitted data from passive attacks
β’ Broadest service protects all user data transmitted between two
users over a period of time
β’ Narrower forms of service include the protection of a single
message or even specific fields within a message
β’ The protection of traffic flow from analysis
β’ This requires that an attacker not be able to observe the source
and destination, frequency, length, or other characteristics of
the traffic on a communications facility
(2) Security Service : Data Confidentiality
35. Can apply to a stream of messages, a single
message, or selected fields within a message
Connection-oriented integrity service deals with
a stream of messages and assures that messages
are received as sent with no duplication,
insertion, modification, reordering, or replays
A connectionless integrity service deals with
individual messages without regard to any larger
context and generally provides protection against
message modification only
(2) Security Service : Data Integrity
36. β’ Prevents either sender or receiver from denying a
transmitted message
β’ When a message is sent, the receiver can prove that the
alleged sender in fact sent the message
β’ When a message is received, the sender can prove that
the alleged receiver in fact received the message
(2) Security Service : Nonrepudtation
37. β’ Availability
β’ The property of a system or a system resource being
accessible and usable upon demand by an authorized
system entity, according to performance specifications for
the system
β’ Availability service
β’ One that protects a system to ensure its availability
β’ Addresses the security concerns raised by denial-of-service
attacks
β’ Depends on proper management and control of system
resources
(2) Security Service : Availability Services
41. NIST
β’ National Institute of Standards and
Technology
β’ U.S. federal agency that deals with
measurement science, standards,
and technology related to U.S.
government use and to the
promotion of U.S. private-sector
innovation
β’ NIST Federal Information
Processing Standards (FIPS) and
Special Publications (SP) have a
worldwide impact
ISOC
β’ Internet Society
β’ Professional membership society with
worldwide organizational and
individual membership
β’ Provides leadership in addressing
issues that confront the future of the
Internet
β’ Is the organization home for the
groups responsible for Internet
infrastructure standards, including the
Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF) and the Internet Architecture
Board (IAB)
β’ Internet standards and related
specifications are published as
Requests for Comments (RFCs)
Standards
42. Summary
β’ Computer security concepts
β’ Definition
β’ Examples
β’ Challenges
β’ The OSI security
architecture
β’ Security attacks
β’ Passive attacks
β’ Active attacks
β’ Security services
β’ Authentication
β’ Access control
β’ Data confidentiality
β’ Data integrity
β’ Nonrepudiation
β’ Availability service
β’ Security mechanisms
β’ Model for network security
β’ Standards
Editor's Notes
#1:Lecture slides prepared for βNetwork Security Essentialsβ, 5/e, by William Stallings, Chapter 1 β βIntroductionβ.
#2: This chapter provides a general overview of the subject matter that structures
the material in the remainder of the book. We begin with a general discussion of network
security services and mechanisms and of the types of attacks they are designed
for. Then we develop a general overall model within which the security services and
mechanisms can be viewed.
#3:This quote from the start of Chapter 1 reflects a fundamental principle that we must understand the strength of the algorithms we use in order to have a suitable level of security.
#4:The requirements of information security within an organization have undergone two
major changes in the last several decades. Before the widespread use of data processing
equipment, the security of information felt to be valuable to an organization was
provided primarily by physical and administrative means. An example of the former
is the use of rugged filing cabinets with a combination lock for storing sensitive documents.
An example of the latter is personnel screening procedures used during the
hiring process.
With the introduction of the computer, the need for automated tools for protecting
files and other information stored on the computer became evident. This is
especially the case for a shared system, such as a time-sharing system, and the need
is even more acute for systems that can be accessed over a public telephone network,
data network, or the Internet. The generic name for the collection of tools designed to
protect data and to thwart hackers is computer security .
The second major change that affected security is the introduction of
distributed systems and the use of networks and communications facilities
for carrying data between terminal user and computer and between computer
and computer. Network security measures are needed to protect data during their
transmission. In fact, the term network security is somewhat misleading, because
virtually all business, government, and academic organizations interconnect
their data processing equipment with a collection of interconnected networks.
Such a collection is often referred to as an internet, and the term internet
security is used.
There are no clear boundaries between these two forms of security. For
example, a computer virus may be introduced into a system physically when it
arrives on a flash drive or an optical disk and is subsequently loaded onto a computer.
Viruses may also arrive over an internet. In either case, once the virus is resident
on a computer system, internal computer security tools are needed to detect
and recover from the virus.
This book focuses on internet security, which consists of measures to deter,
prevent, detect, and correct security violations that involve the transmission of
information.
#17: The NIST Computer Security Handbook [NIST95] defines the term computer security
as follows:
Computer Security: The protection afforded to an automated information system
in order to attain the applicable objectives of preserving the integrity, availability,
and confidentiality of information system resources (includes hardware, software,
firmware, information/data, and telecommunications).
#22:Confidentiality
Student grade information is an asset whose confidentiality is
considered to be highly important by students. In the United States, the release of
such information is regulated by the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act
(FERPA). Grade information should only be available to students, their parents,
and employees that require the information to do their job. Student enrollment
information may have a moderate confidentiality rating. While still covered by
FERPA, this information is seen by more people on a daily basis, is less likely to be
targeted than grade information, and results in less damage if disclosed. Directory
information (such as lists of students, faculty, or departmental lists) may be assigned
a low confidentiality rating or indeed no rating. This information is typically freely
available to the public and published on a schoolβs Web site.
Integrity
Several aspects of integrity are illustrated by the example of a hospital
patientβs allergy information stored in a database. The doctor should be able to
trust that the information is correct and current. Now suppose that an employee
(e.g., a nurse) who is authorized to view and update this information deliberately
falsifies the data to cause harm to the hospital. The database needs to be restored
to a trusted basis quickly, and it should be possible to trace the error back to the
person responsible. Patient allergy information is an example of an asset with a high
requirement for integrity. Inaccurate information could result in serious harm or
death to a patient and expose the hospital to massive liability.
An example of an asset that may be assigned a moderate level of integrity
requirement is a Web site that offers a forum to registered users to discuss some
specific topic. Either a registered user or a hacker could falsify some entries or deface
the Web site. If the forum exists only for the enjoyment of the users, brings
in little or no advertising revenue, and is not used for something important such
as research, then potential damage is not severe. The Web master may experience
some data, financial, and time loss.
An example of a low-integrity requirement is an anonymous online poll. Many
Web sites, such as news organizations, offer these polls to their users with very few
safeguards. However, the inaccuracy and unscientific nature of such polls are well
understood.
Availability
The more critical a component or service, the higher is the level of
availability required. Consider a system that provides authentication services for
critical systems, applications, and devices. An interruption of service results in the
inability for customers to access computing resources and for the staff to access
the resources they need to perform critical tasks. The loss of the service translates
into a large financial loss due to lost employee productivity and potential
customer loss.
An example of an asset that typically would be rated as having a moderate
availability requirement is a public Web site for a university; the Web site provides
information for current and prospective students and donors. Such a site is not a
critical component of the universityβs information system, but its unavailability will
cause some embarrassment.
An online telephone directory lookup application would be classified as a low availability
requirement. Although the temporary loss of the application may be
an annoyance, there are other ways to access the information, such as a hardcopy
directory or the operator.
#23:Computer and network security is both fascinating and complex. Some of the reasons
include:
1. Security is not as simple as it might first appear to the novice. The requirements
seem to be straightforward; indeed, most of the major requirements for
security services can be given self-explanatory, one-word labels: confidentiality,
authentication, nonrepudiation, and integrity. But the mechanisms used to
meet those requirements can be quite complex, and understanding them may
involve rather subtle reasoning.
2. In developing a particular security mechanism or algorithm, one must always
consider potential attacks on those security features. In many cases, successful
attacks are designed by looking at the problem in a completely different way,
therefore exploiting an unexpected weakness in the mechanism.
3. Because of point 2, the procedures used to provide particular services are
often counterintuitive. Typically, a security mechanism is complex, and it is not
obvious from the statement of a particular requirement that such elaborate
measures are needed. It is only when the various aspects of the threat are considered
that elaborate security mechanisms make sense.
4. Having designed various security mechanisms, it is necessary to decide where
to use them. This is true both in terms of physical placement (e.g., at what points
in a network are certain security mechanisms needed) and in a logical sense
[e.g., at what layer or layers of an architecture such as TCP/IP (Transmission
Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) should mechanisms be placed].
5. Security mechanisms typically involve more than a particular algorithm or
protocol. They also require that participants be in possession of some secret information
(e.g., an encryption key), which raises questions about the creation,
distribution, and protection of that secret information. There also may be a reliance
on communications protocols whose behavior may complicate the task
of developing the security mechanism. For example, if the proper functioning
of the security mechanism requires setting time limits on the transit time of a
message from sender to receiver, then any protocol or network that introduces
variable, unpredictable delays may render such time limits meaningless.
6. Computer and network security is essentially a battle of wits between a perpetrator
who tries to find holes and the designer or administrator who tries to
close them. The great advantage that the attacker has is that he or she need
only find a single weakness, while the designer must find and eliminate all
weaknesses to achieve perfect security.
7. There is a natural tendency on the part of users and system managers to
perceive little benefit from security investment until a security failure occurs.
8. Security requires regular, even constant, monitoring, and this is difficult in
todayβs short-term, overloaded environment.
9. Security is still too often an afterthought to be incorporated into a system after
the design is complete rather than being an integral part of the design process.
10. Many users (and even security administrators) view strong security as an
impediment to efficient and user-friendly operation of an information
system or use of information.
The difficulties just enumerated will be encountered in numerous ways as we
examine the various security threats and mechanisms throughout this book.
#24: To assess effectively the security needs of an organization and to evaluate and
choose various security products and policies, the manager responsible for computer
and network security needs some systematic way of defining the requirements
for security and characterizing the approaches to satisfying those requirements.
This is difficult enough in a centralized data processing environment; with the use of
local and wide area networks, the problems are compounded.
ITU-T Recommendation X.800, Security Architecture for OSI , defines such a
systematic approach. The OSI security architecture is useful to managers as a way
of organizing the task of providing security. Furthermore, because this architecture
was developed as an international standard, computer and communications vendors
have developed security features for their products and services that relate to this
structured definition of services and mechanisms.
For our purposes, the OSI security architecture provides a useful, if abstract,
overview of many of the concepts that this book deals with. The OSI security architecture
focuses on security attacks, mechanisms, and services. These can be defined
briefly as
β’ Security attack: Any action that compromises the security of information
owned by an organization.
β’ Security mechanism: A process (or a device incorporating such a process) that
is designed to detect, prevent, or recover from a security attack.
β’ Security service: A processing or communication service that enhances the
security of the data processing systems and the information transfers of an
organization. The services are intended to counter security attacks, and they
make use of one or more security mechanisms to provide the service.
#25: In the literature, the terms threat and attack are commonly used to mean more
or less the same thing. Table 1.1 provides definitions taken from RFC 4949, Internet
Security Glossary.
#26: A useful means of classifying security attacks, used both in X.800 and RFC 4949, is in
terms of passive attacks and active attacks (Figure 1.1). A passive attack attempts to
learn or make use of information from the system but does not affect system resources.
An active attack attempts to alter system resources or affect their operation.
#27: Passive attacks (Figure 1.1) are in the nature of eavesdropping on, or monitoring
of, transmissions. The goal of the opponent is to obtain information that is being
transmitted. Two types of passive attacks are the release of message contents and
traffic analysis.
The release of message contents is easily understood. A telephone conversation,
an electronic mail message, and a transferred file may contain sensitive or
confidential information. We would like to prevent an opponent from learning the
contents of these transmissions.
A second type of passive attack, traffic analysis , is subtler. Suppose that we
had a way of masking the contents of messages or other information traffic so that
opponents, even if they captured the message, could not extract the information
from the message. The common technique for masking contents is encryption. If we
had encryption protection in place, an opponent might still be able to observe the
pattern of these messages. The opponent could determine the location and identity
of communicating hosts and could observe the frequency and length of messages
being exchanged. This information might be useful in guessing the nature of the
communication that was taking place.
Passive attacks are very difficult to detect, because they do not involve any
alteration of the data. Typically, the message traffic is sent and received in an apparently
normal fashion, and neither the sender nor receiver is aware that a third party
has read the messages or observed the traffic pattern. However, it is feasible to prevent
the success of these attacks, usually by means of encryption. Thus, the emphasis
in dealing with passive attacks is on prevention rather than detection.
#28: Active attacks (Figure 1.1b) involve some modification of the data stream or the
creation of a false stream and can be subdivided into four categories: masquerade,
replay, modification of messages, and denial of service.
A masquerade takes place when one entity pretends to be a different entity
(path 2 of Figure 1.1b is active). A masquerade attack usually includes one of the
other forms of active attack. For example, authentication sequences can be captured
and replayed after a valid authentication sequence has taken place, thus enabling an
authorized entity with few privileges to obtain extra privileges by impersonating an
entity that has those privileges.
Replay involves the passive capture of a data unit and its subsequent retransmission
to produce an unauthorized effect (paths 1, 2, and 3 active).
Modification of messages simply means that some portion of a legitimate
message is altered, or that messages are delayed or reordered, to produce an
unauthorized effect (paths 1 and 2 active). For example, a message meaning βAllow
John Smith to read confidential file accounts β is modified to mean βAllow Fred
Brown to read confidential file accounts. β
The denial of service prevents or inhibits the normal use or management of
communications facilities (path 3 active). This attack may have a specific target; for
example, an entity may suppress all messages directed to a particular destination
(e.g., the security audit service). Another form of service denial is the disruption
of an entire network, either by disabling the network or by overloading it with
messages so as to degrade performance.
Active attacks present the opposite characteristics of passive attacks. Whereas
passive attacks are difficult to detect, measures are available to prevent their success.
On the other hand, it is quite difficult to prevent active attacks absolutely
because of the wide variety of potential physical, software, and network vulnerabilities.
Instead, the goal is to detect active attacks and to recover from any disruption
or delays caused by them. If the detection has a deterrent effect, it may also
contribute to prevention.
#29: X.800 divides these services into five categories and fourteen specific services
(Table 1.2).
#30: X.800 defines a security service as a service that is provided by a protocol layer of
communicating open systems and that ensures adequate security of the systems
or of data transfers. Perhaps a clearer definition is found in RFC 4949, which
provides the following definition: a processing or communication service that is
provided by a system to give a specific kind of protection to system resources;
security services implement security policies and are implemented by security
mechanisms.
#31: X.800 divides these services into five categories.
#32:The authentication service is concerned with assuring that a communication is
authentic. In the case of a single message, such as a warning or alarm signal, the
function of the authentication service is to assure the recipient that the message
is from the source that it claims to be from. In the case of an ongoing interaction,
such as the connection of a terminal to a host, two aspects are involved. First,
at the time of connection initiation, the service assures that the two entities are
authentic, that is, that each is the entity that it claims to be. Second, the service
must assure that the connection is not interfered with in such a way that a third
party can masquerade as one of the two legitimate parties for the purposes of
unauthorized transmission or reception.
Two specific authentication services are defined in X.800:
β’ Peer entity authentication: Provides for the corroboration of the identity
of a peer entity in an association. Two entities are considered peers if they
implement to same protocol in different systems; for example two TCP modules
in two communicating systems. Peer entity authentication is provided for
use at the establishment of, or at times during the data transfer phase of, a
connection. It attempts to provide confidence that an entity is not performing
either a masquerade or an unauthorized replay of a previous connection.
β’ Data origin authentication: Provides for the corroboration of the source of a
data unit. It does not provide protection against the duplication or modification
of data units. This type of service supports applications like electronic mail,
where there are no prior interactions between the communicating entities.
#33: In the context of network security, access control is the ability to limit and control
the access to host systems and applications via communications links. To achieve
this, each entity trying to gain access must first be identified, or authenticated, so
that access rights can be tailored to the individual.
#34: Confidentiality is the protection of transmitted data from passive attacks. With
respect to the content of a data transmission, several levels of protection can be
identified. The broadest service protects all user data transmitted between two
users over a period of time. For example, when a TCP connection is set up between
two systems, this broad protection prevents the release of any user data transmitted
over the TCP connection. Narrower forms of this service can also be defined,
including the protection of a single message or even specific fields within a message.
These refinements are less useful than the broad approach and may even be more
complex and expensive to implement.
The other aspect of confidentiality is the protection of traffic flow from analysis.
This requires that an attacker not be able to observe the source and destination, frequency,
length, or other characteristics of the traffic on a communications facility.