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Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 2
 Recognize that organizations have a business need for information
security
 Understand that a successful information security program is the
responsibility of both an organization’s general management and IT
management
 Identify the threats posed to information security and the more
common attacks associated with those threats, and differentiate
threats to the information within systems from attacks against the
information within systems
 Describe the issues facing software developers, as well as the most
common errors made by developers, and explain how software
development programs can create software that is more secure and
reliable
Learning Objectives
Upon completion of this material, you should be able to:
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 3
Introduction
 Primary mission of information security is to ensure
systems and contents stay the same
 If no threats, could focus on improving systems, resulting
in vast improvements in ease of use and usefulness
 Attacks on information systems are a daily occurrence
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 4
Business Needs First
 Information security performs four important functions
for an organization
 Protects ability to function
 Enables safe operation of applications implemented on
its IT systems
 Protects data the organization collects and uses
 Safeguards technology assets in use
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 5
Protecting the Functionality of an Organization
 Management (general and IT) responsible for
implementation
 Information security is both management issue and
people issue
 Organization should address information security in
terms of business impact and cost
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 6
Enabling the Safe Operation of Applications
 Organization needs environments that safeguard
applications using IT systems
 Management must continue to oversee infrastructure
once in place—not defer to IT department
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 7
Protecting Data that Organizations Collect and
Use
 Organization, without data, loses its record of transactions
and/or ability to deliver value to customers
 Protecting data in motion and data at rest are both critical
aspects of information security
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 8
Safeguarding Technology Assets in Organizations
 Organizations must have secure infrastructure services
based on size and scope of enterprise
 Additional security services may be needed as
organization expands
 More robust solutions may be needed to replace security
programs the organization has outgrown
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 9
Threats
 Threat: an object, person, or other entity that represents a
constant danger to an asset
 Management must be informed of the different threats
facing the organization
 By examining each threat category, management
effectively protects information through policy, education,
training, and technology controls
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 10
Threats (continued)
 The 2006 CSI/FBI survey found:
 72 percent of organizations reported cyber security
breaches within the last 12 months
 52 percent of respondents identified unauthorized
computer use
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 11
Threats to Information Security
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 12
Acts of Human Error or Failure
 Includes acts performed without malicious intent
 Causes include:
 Inexperience
 Improper training
 Incorrect assumptions
 Employees are among the greatest threats to an
organization’s data
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 13
Acts of Human Error or Failure (continued)
 Employee mistakes can easily lead to:
 Revelation of classified data
 Entry of erroneous data
 Accidental data deletion or modification
 Data storage in unprotected areas
 Failure to protect information
 Many of these threats can be prevented with controls
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 14
Figure 2-1 – Acts of Human Error or
Failure
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 15
Compromises to Intellectual Property
 Intellectual property (IP): “ownership of ideas and control
over the tangible or virtual representation of those ideas”
 The most common IP breaches involve software piracy
 Two watchdog organizations investigate software abuse:
 Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA)
 Business Software Alliance (BSA)
 Enforcement of copyright law has been attempted with
technical security mechanisms
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 16
Deliberate Acts of Trespass
 Access of protected information by unauthorized individuals
 Competitive intelligence (legal) vs. industrial
espionage (illegal)
 Shoulder surfing can occur anywhere a person accesses
confidential information
 Controls let trespassers know they are encroaching on
organization’s cyberspace
 Hackers use skill, guile, or fraud to bypass controls
protecting others’ information
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 17
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 18
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 19
Deliberate Acts of Trespass (continued)
 Expert hacker
 Develops software scripts and program exploits
 Usually a master of many skills
 Will often create attack software and share with others
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 20
Deliberate Acts of Trespass (continued)
 Unskilled hacker
 Many more unskilled hackers than expert hackers
 Use expertly written software to exploit a system
 Do not usually fully understand the systems they hack
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 21
Deliberate Acts of Trespass (continued)
 Other terms for system rule breakers:
 Cracker: “cracks” or removes software protection
designed to prevent unauthorized duplication
 Phreaker: hacks the public telephone network
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 22
Deliberate Acts of Information Extortion
 Attacker steals information from computer system and
demands compensation for its return or nondisclosure
 Commonly done in credit card number theft
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 23
Deliberate Acts of Sabotage or Vandalism
 Attacks on the face of an organization—its Web site
 Threats can range from petty vandalism to organized
sabotage
 Web site defacing can erode consumer confidence,
dropping sales and organization’s net worth
 Threat of hacktivist or cyberactivist operations rising
 Cyberterrorism: much more sinister form of hacking
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 24
Figure 2-5 - Cyber Activists Wanted
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 25
Deliberate Acts of Theft
 Illegal taking of another’s physical, electronic, or
intellectual property
 Physical theft is controlled relatively easily
 Electronic theft is more complex problem; evidence of
crime not readily apparent
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 26
Deliberate Software Attacks
 Malicious software (malware) designed to damage,
destroy, or deny service to target systems
 Includes viruses, worms, Trojan horses, logic bombs,
back doors, and denial-of-service attacks
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 27
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 28
Forces of Nature
 Forces of nature are among the most dangerous threats
 Disrupt not only individual lives, but also storage,
transmission, and use of information
 Organizations must implement controls to limit damage
and prepare contingency plans for continued operations
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 29
Deviations in Quality of Service
 Includes situations where products or services are not
delivered as expected
 Information system depends on many interdependent
support systems
 Internet service, communications, and power irregularities
dramatically affect availability of information and systems
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 30
Internet Service Issues
 Internet service provider (ISP) failures can considerably
undermine availability of information
 Outsourced Web hosting provider assumes responsibility
for all Internet services as well as hardware and Web site
operating system software
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 31
Communications and Other Service
Provider Issues
 Other utility services affect organizations: telephone,
water, wastewater, trash pickup, etc.
 Loss of these services can affect organization’s ability to
function
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 32
Power Irregularities
 Commonplace
 Lead to fluctuations such as power excesses, power
shortages, and power losses
 Organizations with inadequately conditioned power are
susceptible
 Controls can be applied to manage power quality
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 33
Technical Hardware Failures or Errors
 Occur when manufacturer distributes equipment
containing flaws to users
 Can cause system to perform outside of expected
parameters, resulting in unreliable or poor service
 Some errors are terminal; some are intermittent
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 34
Technical Software Failures or Errors
 Purchased software that contains unrevealed faults
 Combinations of certain software and hardware can
reveal new software bugs
 Entire Web sites dedicated to documenting bugs
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 35
Technological Obsolescence
 Antiquated/outdated infrastructure can lead to unreliable,
untrustworthy systems
 Proper managerial planning should prevent technology
obsolescence; IT plays large role
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 36
Attacks
 Act or action that exploits vulnerability (i.e., an identified
weakness) in controlled system
 Accomplished by threat agent that damages or steals
organization’s information
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 37
Table 2-2 - Attack Replication
Vectors
New Table
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 38
Attacks (continued)
 Malicious code: includes execution of viruses, worms,
Trojan horses, and active Web scripts with intent to
destroy or steal information
 Hoaxes: transmission of a virus hoax with a real virus
attached; more devious form of attack
 Back door: gaining access to system or network using
known or previously unknown/newly discovered access
mechanism
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 39
Attacks (continued)
 Password crack: attempting to reverse calculate a
password
 Brute force: trying every possible combination of options
of a password
 Dictionary: selects specific accounts to attack and uses
commonly used passwords (i.e., the dictionary) to guide
guesses
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 40
Attacks (continued)
 Denial-of-service (DoS): attacker sends large number of
connection or information requests to a target
 Target system cannot handle successfully along with
other, legitimate service requests
 May result in system crash or inability to perform ordinary
functions
 Distributed denial-of-service (DDoS): coordinated stream
of requests is launched against target from many
locations simultaneously
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 41
Figure 2-9 - Denial-of-Service
Attacks
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 42
Attacks (continued)
 Spoofing: technique used to gain unauthorized access;
intruder assumes a trusted IP address
 Man-in-the-middle: attacker monitors network packets,
modifies them, and inserts them back into network
 Spam: unsolicited commercial e-mail; more a nuisance
than an attack, though is emerging as a vector for some
attacks
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 43
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 44
Figure 2-11 - Man-in-the-Middle
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 45
Attacks (continued)
 Mail bombing: also a DoS; attacker routes large quantities
of e-mail to target
 Sniffers: program or device that monitors data traveling
over network; can be used both for legitimate purposes
and for stealing information from a network
 Social engineering: using social skills to convince people
to reveal access credentials or other valuable information
to attacker
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 46
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 47
Attacks (continued)
 “People are the weakest link. You can have the best
technology; firewalls, intrusion-detection systems,
biometric devices ... and somebody can call an
unsuspecting employee. That's all she wrote, baby. They
got everything.” — Kevin Mitnick
 Phishing: an attempt to gain personal/financial
information from individual, usually by posing as
legitimate entity
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 48
Attacks (continued)
 Pharming: redirection of legitimate Web traffic (e.g.,
browser requests) to illegitimate site for the purpose of
obtaining private information
 Timing attack: relatively new; works by exploring contents
of a Web browser’s cache to create malicious cookie
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 49
Secure Software Development
 Many information security issues discussed here are
caused by software elements of system
 Development of software and systems is often
accomplished using methodology such as Systems
Development Life Cycle (SDLC)
 Many organizations recognize need for security objectives
in SDLC and have included procedures to create more
secure software
 This software development approach known as Software
Assurance (SA)
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 50
Software Assurance and the SA Common
Body of Knowledge
 National effort underway to create common body of
knowledge focused on secure software development
 US Department of Defense and Department of Homeland
Security supported Software Assurance Initiative, which
resulted in publication of Secure Software Assurance
(SwA) Common Body of Knowledge (CBK)
 SwA CBK serves as a strongly recommended guide to
developing more secure applications
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 51
Software Design Principles
 Good software development results in secure products that
meet all design specifications
 Some commonplace security principles:
 Keep design simple and small
 Access decisions by permission not exclusion
 Every access to every object checked for authority
 Design depends on possession of keys/passwords
 Protection mechanisms require two keys to unlock
 Programs/users utilize only necessary privileges
 Minimize mechanisms common to multiple users
 Human interface must be easy to use so users
routinely/automatically use protection mechanisms
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 52
Software Development Security Problems
 Problem areas in software development:
 Buffer overruns
 Command injection
 Cross-site scripting
 Failure to handle errors
 Failure to protect network traffic
 Failure to store and protect data securely
 Failure to use cryptographically strong random numbers
 Format string problems
 Neglecting change control
 Improper file access
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 53
Software Development Security Problems
(continued)
 Problem areas in software development (continued):
 Improper use of SSL
 Information leakage
 Integer bugs (overflows/underflows)
 Race conditions
 SQL injection
 Trusting network address resolution
 Unauthenticated key exchange
 Use of magic URLs and hidden forms
 Use of weak password-based systems
 Poor usability
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 54
Summary
 Unlike any other aspect of IT, information security’s
primary mission to ensure things stay the way they are
 Information security performs four important functions:
 Protects organization’s ability to function
 Enables safe operation of applications implemented on
organization’s IT systems
 Protects data the organization collects and uses
 Safeguards the technology assets in use at the
organization
Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 55
Summary (continued)
 Threat: object, person, or other entity representing a
constant danger to an asset
 Management effectively protects its information through
policy, education, training, and technology controls
 Attack: a deliberate act that exploits vulnerability
 Secure systems require secure software

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chapter on Cyber 02.ppt presentation on it

  • 2. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 2  Recognize that organizations have a business need for information security  Understand that a successful information security program is the responsibility of both an organization’s general management and IT management  Identify the threats posed to information security and the more common attacks associated with those threats, and differentiate threats to the information within systems from attacks against the information within systems  Describe the issues facing software developers, as well as the most common errors made by developers, and explain how software development programs can create software that is more secure and reliable Learning Objectives Upon completion of this material, you should be able to:
  • 3. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 3 Introduction  Primary mission of information security is to ensure systems and contents stay the same  If no threats, could focus on improving systems, resulting in vast improvements in ease of use and usefulness  Attacks on information systems are a daily occurrence
  • 4. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 4 Business Needs First  Information security performs four important functions for an organization  Protects ability to function  Enables safe operation of applications implemented on its IT systems  Protects data the organization collects and uses  Safeguards technology assets in use
  • 5. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 5 Protecting the Functionality of an Organization  Management (general and IT) responsible for implementation  Information security is both management issue and people issue  Organization should address information security in terms of business impact and cost
  • 6. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 6 Enabling the Safe Operation of Applications  Organization needs environments that safeguard applications using IT systems  Management must continue to oversee infrastructure once in place—not defer to IT department
  • 7. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 7 Protecting Data that Organizations Collect and Use  Organization, without data, loses its record of transactions and/or ability to deliver value to customers  Protecting data in motion and data at rest are both critical aspects of information security
  • 8. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 8 Safeguarding Technology Assets in Organizations  Organizations must have secure infrastructure services based on size and scope of enterprise  Additional security services may be needed as organization expands  More robust solutions may be needed to replace security programs the organization has outgrown
  • 9. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 9 Threats  Threat: an object, person, or other entity that represents a constant danger to an asset  Management must be informed of the different threats facing the organization  By examining each threat category, management effectively protects information through policy, education, training, and technology controls
  • 10. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 10 Threats (continued)  The 2006 CSI/FBI survey found:  72 percent of organizations reported cyber security breaches within the last 12 months  52 percent of respondents identified unauthorized computer use
  • 11. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 11 Threats to Information Security
  • 12. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 12 Acts of Human Error or Failure  Includes acts performed without malicious intent  Causes include:  Inexperience  Improper training  Incorrect assumptions  Employees are among the greatest threats to an organization’s data
  • 13. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 13 Acts of Human Error or Failure (continued)  Employee mistakes can easily lead to:  Revelation of classified data  Entry of erroneous data  Accidental data deletion or modification  Data storage in unprotected areas  Failure to protect information  Many of these threats can be prevented with controls
  • 14. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 14 Figure 2-1 – Acts of Human Error or Failure
  • 15. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 15 Compromises to Intellectual Property  Intellectual property (IP): “ownership of ideas and control over the tangible or virtual representation of those ideas”  The most common IP breaches involve software piracy  Two watchdog organizations investigate software abuse:  Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA)  Business Software Alliance (BSA)  Enforcement of copyright law has been attempted with technical security mechanisms
  • 16. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 16 Deliberate Acts of Trespass  Access of protected information by unauthorized individuals  Competitive intelligence (legal) vs. industrial espionage (illegal)  Shoulder surfing can occur anywhere a person accesses confidential information  Controls let trespassers know they are encroaching on organization’s cyberspace  Hackers use skill, guile, or fraud to bypass controls protecting others’ information
  • 17. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 17
  • 18. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 18
  • 19. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 19 Deliberate Acts of Trespass (continued)  Expert hacker  Develops software scripts and program exploits  Usually a master of many skills  Will often create attack software and share with others
  • 20. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 20 Deliberate Acts of Trespass (continued)  Unskilled hacker  Many more unskilled hackers than expert hackers  Use expertly written software to exploit a system  Do not usually fully understand the systems they hack
  • 21. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 21 Deliberate Acts of Trespass (continued)  Other terms for system rule breakers:  Cracker: “cracks” or removes software protection designed to prevent unauthorized duplication  Phreaker: hacks the public telephone network
  • 22. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 22 Deliberate Acts of Information Extortion  Attacker steals information from computer system and demands compensation for its return or nondisclosure  Commonly done in credit card number theft
  • 23. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 23 Deliberate Acts of Sabotage or Vandalism  Attacks on the face of an organization—its Web site  Threats can range from petty vandalism to organized sabotage  Web site defacing can erode consumer confidence, dropping sales and organization’s net worth  Threat of hacktivist or cyberactivist operations rising  Cyberterrorism: much more sinister form of hacking
  • 24. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 24 Figure 2-5 - Cyber Activists Wanted
  • 25. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 25 Deliberate Acts of Theft  Illegal taking of another’s physical, electronic, or intellectual property  Physical theft is controlled relatively easily  Electronic theft is more complex problem; evidence of crime not readily apparent
  • 26. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 26 Deliberate Software Attacks  Malicious software (malware) designed to damage, destroy, or deny service to target systems  Includes viruses, worms, Trojan horses, logic bombs, back doors, and denial-of-service attacks
  • 27. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 27
  • 28. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 28 Forces of Nature  Forces of nature are among the most dangerous threats  Disrupt not only individual lives, but also storage, transmission, and use of information  Organizations must implement controls to limit damage and prepare contingency plans for continued operations
  • 29. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 29 Deviations in Quality of Service  Includes situations where products or services are not delivered as expected  Information system depends on many interdependent support systems  Internet service, communications, and power irregularities dramatically affect availability of information and systems
  • 30. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 30 Internet Service Issues  Internet service provider (ISP) failures can considerably undermine availability of information  Outsourced Web hosting provider assumes responsibility for all Internet services as well as hardware and Web site operating system software
  • 31. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 31 Communications and Other Service Provider Issues  Other utility services affect organizations: telephone, water, wastewater, trash pickup, etc.  Loss of these services can affect organization’s ability to function
  • 32. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 32 Power Irregularities  Commonplace  Lead to fluctuations such as power excesses, power shortages, and power losses  Organizations with inadequately conditioned power are susceptible  Controls can be applied to manage power quality
  • 33. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 33 Technical Hardware Failures or Errors  Occur when manufacturer distributes equipment containing flaws to users  Can cause system to perform outside of expected parameters, resulting in unreliable or poor service  Some errors are terminal; some are intermittent
  • 34. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 34 Technical Software Failures or Errors  Purchased software that contains unrevealed faults  Combinations of certain software and hardware can reveal new software bugs  Entire Web sites dedicated to documenting bugs
  • 35. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 35 Technological Obsolescence  Antiquated/outdated infrastructure can lead to unreliable, untrustworthy systems  Proper managerial planning should prevent technology obsolescence; IT plays large role
  • 36. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 36 Attacks  Act or action that exploits vulnerability (i.e., an identified weakness) in controlled system  Accomplished by threat agent that damages or steals organization’s information
  • 37. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 37 Table 2-2 - Attack Replication Vectors New Table
  • 38. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 38 Attacks (continued)  Malicious code: includes execution of viruses, worms, Trojan horses, and active Web scripts with intent to destroy or steal information  Hoaxes: transmission of a virus hoax with a real virus attached; more devious form of attack  Back door: gaining access to system or network using known or previously unknown/newly discovered access mechanism
  • 39. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 39 Attacks (continued)  Password crack: attempting to reverse calculate a password  Brute force: trying every possible combination of options of a password  Dictionary: selects specific accounts to attack and uses commonly used passwords (i.e., the dictionary) to guide guesses
  • 40. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 40 Attacks (continued)  Denial-of-service (DoS): attacker sends large number of connection or information requests to a target  Target system cannot handle successfully along with other, legitimate service requests  May result in system crash or inability to perform ordinary functions  Distributed denial-of-service (DDoS): coordinated stream of requests is launched against target from many locations simultaneously
  • 41. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 41 Figure 2-9 - Denial-of-Service Attacks
  • 42. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 42 Attacks (continued)  Spoofing: technique used to gain unauthorized access; intruder assumes a trusted IP address  Man-in-the-middle: attacker monitors network packets, modifies them, and inserts them back into network  Spam: unsolicited commercial e-mail; more a nuisance than an attack, though is emerging as a vector for some attacks
  • 43. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 43
  • 44. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 44 Figure 2-11 - Man-in-the-Middle
  • 45. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 45 Attacks (continued)  Mail bombing: also a DoS; attacker routes large quantities of e-mail to target  Sniffers: program or device that monitors data traveling over network; can be used both for legitimate purposes and for stealing information from a network  Social engineering: using social skills to convince people to reveal access credentials or other valuable information to attacker
  • 46. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 46
  • 47. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 47 Attacks (continued)  “People are the weakest link. You can have the best technology; firewalls, intrusion-detection systems, biometric devices ... and somebody can call an unsuspecting employee. That's all she wrote, baby. They got everything.” — Kevin Mitnick  Phishing: an attempt to gain personal/financial information from individual, usually by posing as legitimate entity
  • 48. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 48 Attacks (continued)  Pharming: redirection of legitimate Web traffic (e.g., browser requests) to illegitimate site for the purpose of obtaining private information  Timing attack: relatively new; works by exploring contents of a Web browser’s cache to create malicious cookie
  • 49. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 49 Secure Software Development  Many information security issues discussed here are caused by software elements of system  Development of software and systems is often accomplished using methodology such as Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC)  Many organizations recognize need for security objectives in SDLC and have included procedures to create more secure software  This software development approach known as Software Assurance (SA)
  • 50. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 50 Software Assurance and the SA Common Body of Knowledge  National effort underway to create common body of knowledge focused on secure software development  US Department of Defense and Department of Homeland Security supported Software Assurance Initiative, which resulted in publication of Secure Software Assurance (SwA) Common Body of Knowledge (CBK)  SwA CBK serves as a strongly recommended guide to developing more secure applications
  • 51. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 51 Software Design Principles  Good software development results in secure products that meet all design specifications  Some commonplace security principles:  Keep design simple and small  Access decisions by permission not exclusion  Every access to every object checked for authority  Design depends on possession of keys/passwords  Protection mechanisms require two keys to unlock  Programs/users utilize only necessary privileges  Minimize mechanisms common to multiple users  Human interface must be easy to use so users routinely/automatically use protection mechanisms
  • 52. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 52 Software Development Security Problems  Problem areas in software development:  Buffer overruns  Command injection  Cross-site scripting  Failure to handle errors  Failure to protect network traffic  Failure to store and protect data securely  Failure to use cryptographically strong random numbers  Format string problems  Neglecting change control  Improper file access
  • 53. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 53 Software Development Security Problems (continued)  Problem areas in software development (continued):  Improper use of SSL  Information leakage  Integer bugs (overflows/underflows)  Race conditions  SQL injection  Trusting network address resolution  Unauthenticated key exchange  Use of magic URLs and hidden forms  Use of weak password-based systems  Poor usability
  • 54. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 54 Summary  Unlike any other aspect of IT, information security’s primary mission to ensure things stay the way they are  Information security performs four important functions:  Protects organization’s ability to function  Enables safe operation of applications implemented on organization’s IT systems  Protects data the organization collects and uses  Safeguards the technology assets in use at the organization
  • 55. Principles of Information Security, 3rd Edition 55 Summary (continued)  Threat: object, person, or other entity representing a constant danger to an asset  Management effectively protects its information through policy, education, training, and technology controls  Attack: a deliberate act that exploits vulnerability  Secure systems require secure software