Tag Archives: virus protection

Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your Network

Watching Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkToday’s threat landscape is loaded with malicious websites, malware and other risks that attack users every nanosecond of the day.  There isn’t a single product available that can guarantee protection from cyber threats. Older solutions leveraging static technologies such as signatures are not good enough. The best approach for dealing with advanced threats is continuously monitoring the entire network through layering security technologies.

Cisco is known for network and collaboration products however Cisco also has a very strong security catalog that extends beyond traditional firewalls and IPS appliances. If I had to summarize Cisco’s core visibility technologies for cyber threats, I would highlight Cisco’s capabilities around Access Control, Web Security and partnership with Lancope for Insider Threats.

Access Control is critical for knowing who and what is accessing your network regardless if it’s the LAN, Wireless or remotely using VPN technology. Cisco Identity Services Engine ISE accomplishes visibility of users accessing the network by leveraging how people authenticate along with profiling what types of devices are being used. The screenshot below shows two users with mobile devices obtaining different levels of wireless access. Cisco ISE can also verify if devices meet specified polies by enforcing posture prior to providing network access meaning ensure Joey’s windows 7 laptop has the latest updates and security applications installed.

ISE Auth Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkCisco ISE showing Android with Contractor access and iPhone with Employee mobile access

Screen Shot 2013 03 01 at 8.36.52 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkProfiled devices in my home lab. “Apple-Device” is a MACMINI hosting ISE via “VMWare-Device”

Screen Shot 2013 03 01 at 8.36.01 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your Network

Some default profiles for Cisco ISE. 

Web Security is crucial for protecting internal users from threats while surfing the public Internet. Cisco Web Security Appliance WSA (previously Ironport) provides visibility of Internet usage as well as security through layered technologies. Network use policies such as denying gambling web content during work hours can easily be enforced through Cisco WSA’s categorized content classes.

Screen Shot 2013 02 22 at 12.08.05 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your Network

Cisco WSA Content Dashboard

The real value of Cisco WSA is going beyond average web content filtering by offering layers of security options that protect users accessing approved content. The first layer is verifying if the web source is a known evil location based on reputation. Reputation can be factors such as where it’s located, how long it’s been up or if it has been marked as a source for malicious activity. If the web source has a safe reputation, WSA scans traffic with a combination of Sophos, McAfee and Webroot engines along with other intelligence looking for malicious behavior. There is also a botnet scanner that sits on a spam port designed to capture users that happen to get compromised and have malware phone home activity from their devices. The botnet scanner is a first step towards identifying insider threats but not good enough.

Screen Shot 2013 02 22 at 5.03.01 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkCisco WSA Main Dashboard

Screen Shot 2013 02 22 at 12.07.42 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkCisco WSA Threat Dashboard

True insider threat visibility can only be accomplished by monitoring all internal traffic for threats that can compromise your network through email, web, infected devices or other means. Cisco has partnered with Lancope to give network wide forensic visibility leveraging capabilities that exist within networking products such as routers, switches and firewalls as well as in the datacenter. Administrators can use Lancope’s Steathwatch to see the top 10 threats that range from Data Loss to Botnet infections.

Screen Shot 2013 02 22 at 12.11.20 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkMain Lancope Cyber Security Dashboard

(Top 4 machines infected with botnets)
Screen Shot 2013 02 22 at 12.12.19 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkEthel’s Windows 7 Workstation With Botnet

Screen Shot 2013 02 22 at 12.12.42 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkEthel’s Workstation communicating with malicious source

Lancope identifies threats using a combination of reputation and behavior regardless if the threat attempts to hide by throttling, encryption or interact through multiple compromised systems. Some examples are flagging a user dumping large amounts of data to dropbox, communication with known malware web sources, host-to-host reconnaissance and use of obscure ports. Lancope can zero in on a threat by stitching together the entire communication chain meaning an administrator will see a map of all infected devices, how the infection started, who the users are (including Cisco ISE integration), where its spreading and how its sending traffic off the network. Lancope also gives visibility into abusing network resources, unauthorized tunneling and problems in network performance.

Screen Shot 2013 02 22 at 12.13.00 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkLancope Dataloss Diagram
Screen Shot 2013 02 22 at 12.13.18 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkMalware Propagation Diagram

Purple IP has infected green IP which is probing other systems
Screen Shot 2013 02 22 at 12.14.47 PM Cisco’s Cyber Solutions – What Is Happening In Your NetworkKnown Botnet Sources via Reputation

Combing Access Control, Web Security and Insider Threat technology gives administrators complete visibility of what is happening on the network. There is a lot of power having reports showing every user and device on the network, how those devices access the public Internet and near real-time analytics on if any of those devices have been compromised. This information can dramatically improve identification and reaction to cyber threats saving time, money and other problems caused by network breaches.

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Filed under Internet Defense, Network Admission Control, Security Management & Analysis

The Anti-Malware / Anti-Virus Vendor Apocalypse: What Security Solution Is Right For You?

 The Anti Malware / Anti Virus Vendor Apocalypse: What Security Solution Is Right For You?
If you search the Internet for anti-malware/Virus or attend security conferences, you will find billions of vendors. Which solution is best? There are endpoint and server solutions, network appliances and embedded upgrades for existing applications. What separates the gazillion anti-whatever solutions outside of price? Many claim reaction time however what separates “X Faster Than Y” when most attacks do damage in milliseconds? It’s best to step away from vendors and understand the DATA you are protecting before considering a solution.

If data on endpoints is the primary focus, consider applications that protect 24/7 regardless of network connectivity. Signature based technology is a commodity and shouldn’t makeup your strategy. The basic principle of signatures is defending documented attacks, which will not catch day zero threats. Behavior technology improves things however must be customized to enforce cooperate policies along with utilizing visibility into all threat vectors to be impactful. Locking down services such as disabling wireless when physically connected and leveraging patch management solutions dramatically decreases the use of anti-virus/Malware services. There are alternatives to endpoint anti-virus/malware solutions such as leveraging proxy-based technology. Proxy solutions act as a middleman between the data and endpoints separating infected machines from the inside network.

Anti-Malware/Virus vendors are targeting appliance solutions at the commercial market. There are Intrusion Detection/Prevention Systems (IDS/IPS) with anti-malware/Virus functions as well as Malware appliances that sit on the wire passively or inline and scan for threats. These solutions can only impact the wire they touch and if inline, typically cause delays. Email and web security appliances usually include native solutions or partner with anti-virus/Malware vendors as part of their suite. Its key that these work together as users could use one to bypass the other (IE avoid cooperate email security by using web email such as Gmail). FireEye took an interesting approach by developing a solution that executes suspicious code/objects in a virtual environment and identifies their intent prior to releasing things to the real network. Cisco Ironport offers a layer 4 traffic scanner in their web security appliance that scans SPAN ports for malware/bot phone home activities from compromised devices. The list goes on regarding anti-malware/Virus appliance solutions so consider where sensitive data sits and how that data moves before dropping appliance technology on the network.

The most important thing to realize is the threats are real. Attackers don’t want to be known and will utilize multiple attack vectors to access your data. Best practice for choosing security solutions focus on likely hood of being compromised verse impact to your business from data being lost. Building security into the data handling process rather than after the fact or around where it sits will save you tons of money. Including your agency’s policies in security planning is a must and education is key to success. Users are the weakest link so choosing solutions that are transparent will be the most successful. Detection is critical which typically is a monitoring solution utilizing Security Information and Event Monitoring (SIEM) technology. Tuning out false positives and developing workflows for handling incidences will determine how successful you are protecting what matters most … the DATA. Anti-Virus/Malware is only one of many attack vectors so look past the vendors and understand your data before you drop the money on a solution.

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Filed under General Security, Host And Mobile Device Security