SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Government >> Technology

Businesses increasing focus on the enemy within, says Cisco exec

Businesses increasing focus on the enemy within, says Cisco exec

By:  narellano  On: 18 Apr 2007 For: ITWorldCanada.com Creator

Large organizations are increasingly looking inwards to secure enterprise applications as threats from external virus attacks diminish, according to a top executive of a data centre technology provider.

COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE

Large organizations are increasingly looking inwards to secure enterprise applications as threats from external virus attacks diminish, according to a top executive of a data centre technology provider. A few years ago, "companies [sought] to protect the perimeter of their networks. Today the need is to secure assets connected to the network from threats [coming] from the inside," according to Jayshree Ullal, senior vice-president, data centre, switching and security technology group, Cisco Systems Inc. Ullal noted that large-scale virus attacks that do significant damage have not been witnessed in the recent past.

"The last time we heard of a critical virus attack was when Zotob struck in 2005. But everyday we read about vital and private data being lost or leaked out from organizations."

In the past, Ullal said, much of enterprise security investment focused on building firewalls to prevent unauthorized access.

One industry insider dubs such initiatives as the "hard shell" approach .

It focuses entirely on protecting the network perimeter, and may not be the best strategy to adopt these days when ubiquitous computing is becoming the norm, according to noted David Fuller, senior vice-president, solutions and products with Telus Business Solutions. Instead, he suggests IT departments develop their application layer assuming people are going to get inside their network. "Once they're inside, make it difficult for them to actually gain access to applications."

Fuller called this the "sticky pudding approach" and said it helps enterprises to effectively resolve the "security versus open access" conundrum.

Ullal said recalls the notion of "implicit trust" that held sway some years ago.

The underlying assumption was "if you had the right IP address, and the right MAC (media access control) address, you were a secure user and you were let into the network."

She said Cisco's products are based on the "explicit trust" model, which requires a higher degree of authentication before a user or incoming data is granted access to the network and its attached assets. The company's Network Admission Control (NAC) software not only screens a user's credentials, but also "verifies the posture of the user or incoming data to determine if entry into the network should be granted," Ullal said. A user may be a "good guy" but could unknowingly bring in harmful data -- spam or data from an untrusted domain."

Such messages could carry viruses that infect applications in the network and result hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage, she said.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 682   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




narellano narellano 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.
blog comments powered by Disqus