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How to block intruders

How to block intruders

By:  Grant Buckler  On: 08 May 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

In the old days, firewalls were often enough to keep hackers out of IT systems. But now vendors are rolling out intrusion prevention systems which block suspicious traffic. How some vendors are combining firewalls with other functions.

In simpler times, simpler security tools were enough – stick a firewall at the edge of the network and relax. But threats multiplied and became more sophisticated.

“Now the attacks are so vicious and so quick that by the time the customer goes to the intrusion detection system it’s already happened and it’s too late,” says Jordan Kalpin, Canadian regional manager for Internet security systems at IBM Canada Ltd. in Markham, Ont. “So in effect the intrusion detection system, because it didn’t block anything, became a forensics tool that they went to after the fact to see exactly what happened.”

So intrusion prevention systems (IPS) – designed not just to monitor network activity but to block suspicious traffic – have largely supplanted IDS. But even they struggle to keep up with evolving threats and faster networks.

Gigabit connections between internal data centres are giving way to 10-gigabit connections, says James Collinge, director of product line management at IPS vendor TippingPoint, a unit of 3Com Corp. in Marlboro, Mass. External connections may be anything from T1 speeds to 100 Megabits per second.

Support for 10-gigabit throughput is “a big focus right now,” says Michelle Perry, chief marketing officer at Columbia, Md.-based Sourcefire Inc. TippingPoint recently launched a Core Controller that can distribute traffic on a 10-gigabit link across multiple IPSs – eliminating the need to replace older IPS gear, Collinge says.

IPSs are also spreading from the perimeter throughout the network. “One of the things that we’re seeing more is the need to protect the core of the network as well,” observes John Yun, product marketing manager at Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Juniper Networks Inc. Infected laptops or memory sticks may introduce threats from inside. Strategically placed IPSs can stop them spreading.

Customers’ networks are easier to keep up with than the proliferation of threats.

McAfee Inc. of Santa Clara, Calif., has improved its IPS’s ability to detect anomalies in network behavior, says Doug Cooke, manager of systems engineers for McAfee Canada. Data gathered from devices such as switches and routers helps spot deviations from normal behaviour that might indicate an attack.

Today’s attacks aren’t as likely to be known exploits as threats never seen before, Kalpin says. “The technologies which will be able to protect (customers) against those kind of attacks … are designed to look for things that are out of the ordinary and are not based on signatures.”


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Grant Buckler Grant Buckler 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.

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