SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Integrating IT >> Tools and Languages

Aging firewalls pose security risks

Aging firewalls pose security risks

By:  John E. Dunn  On: 02 Feb 2009 For: Techworld.com(NA) 

The succession of admins maintaining geriatric corporate firewalls often leave a trail duplicated rules and security holes that lay an organization open to various attacks

Firewalls become more of a security risk as they 'age', a security assessment company has advised at the launch of a new service it claims can strip out the risk posed by out-of-date rules.

According to UK-based Pentura, firewalls are typically managed by a succession of admins who create their own rules, which then accumulate over a period of years. This creates rule duplication, which can impinge on performance, but also brings risks such as the use default or open passwords.

Worst still, because some staff with access to the firewall console will have been from partners and third party organisations, old rules can leave a trail of security holes that go unnoticed by the staff that succeed them.

Protecting your network

How to block intruders

The company estimates that the average company of 5,000-10,000 seats, will have anything between 200 and 600 rules per firewall, more if multiple devices is taken into account.

The commonest problem will simply be excessive use of the same policies. Understanding the web of sometimes complex rules was extremely difficult to do, more so for staff not steeped in the subtleties of a particular platform. "Above 100 rules it starts to get harder," said Pentura's R&D director Simon Morris. "Rules get added rather than taken away."

Pentura uses an automated tool for a first-run analysis, which forms the basis for a manual assessment of where the overlaps and possibly security problems might lie, he said. The main platforms encountered by the company were Cisco,Check Point and, even years after its disappearance, Netscreen, which demonstrated the length of time 'geriatric' firewalls were being kept in service.

The service is restricted to conventional packet firewalls, but the company is looking at how this concept might be extended to application and unified threat management (UTM) devices in the future.

The Firewall Risk Assessment service, including remediation, starts at £5,000 (approx $3,400) for a single cluster - usually two devices - with economies of scale as more firewalls are added.

Techworld


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 966   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




John E. Dunn John E. Dunn is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

Security management, SaaS headline CAWorld
Security management, SaaS headline CAWorldThe global recession has made its presence felt at this week’s CAWorld 2008. Read about the company’s plans on security management for outgoing enterprise data in the face of more and more IT outsourcing
Security admins make risk management pitch
Security admins make risk management pitchRepresentatives from CIBC, Unisys and elsewhere discuss their approach to selling business leaders on the right products and strategy for protecting enterprise information. Coverage from SecTor 2008
Learn when to back off
Learn when to back offBeing overly rigid on security procedures can sometimes do more harm than good. Knowing when to cut users some slack can actually help to tighten your security environment.
Trusting the trusted data centre
in a recent conversation with hewlett-packard co.’s chief technology officer, victor garcia, i first heard the concept of “trusted cloud computing”. coined by hp, the phrase characterizes what the company envisions as th
Dan Swanson's Security Resources: #4
my fourth column provides another diverse collection of leading resources. this week’s question: “how prepared is your organization?” if you have any concerns on the robustness of your disaster recovery, business continuity, and/or your emergency management capabilities, i’d strongly recommend you check out the canadian centre for emergency preparedness. studying for your ciss
The Olympics as a showcase for IT security
public safety minister peter van loan announced yesterday that security costs for vancouver’s 2010 winter olympics could reach up to $1-billion. but how much of that money is allocated to the it security threats that might arise during the games? 
blog comments powered by Disqus