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Security experts evaluate scoring system

Security experts evaluate scoring system By:  Rafael Ruffolo On: 19 Jul 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

An industry group tries to straighten out some issues with the standard for prioritizing response to potential software threats, but a Canadian consultant warns against "managing by the numbers"



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A standardized and vendor-neutral system that measures IT vulnerabilities has been updated to help IT managers prioritize their response to security potential threats.

The second version of the Common Vulnerability Scoring System, or CVSS v2, calculates a threat score based on a series of measurements referred to as metrics, making it the IT equivalent of the U.S. Homeland Security Advisory System, but without the colour-coded chart. The system measures three areas of concern: 1) base metrics which captures the characteristics of a vulnerability that are constant with time and across user environments.; 2) temporal metrics for characteristics that evolve over the lifetime of vulnerability; and 3) environmental metrics for characteristics of a vulnerability that are associated with a user's IT environment.

Gavin Reid, chair of the CVSS-Special Interest Group, said because CVSS v1 didn’t go through a rigorous peer review stage, problems with the formula led to some inaccurate scoring.

“We’ve increased the fidelity and the accuracy of the equations by really spending a lot of time working on the formula,” Reid said. “CVSS v1 had a couple of areas where a bunch of the vulnerabilities sort of clumped on certain scores like seven or 10 and all the vulnerabilities seemed to get those scores. So, we tried to ensure that we used the full available spectrum from zero to 10, but in doing that, we still wanted to increase the fidelity and not make things worse.” To achieve a more accurate formula, Reid said the updated system was tested by members of CVSS-SIG, comprised of various IT professionals, for two years on their experiences with real-world vulnerabilities.

“If there was a vulnerability that we all agreed should have scored higher we’d look to see the reasons why and make the changes to the system,” Reid said. “We also added an extra layer of granularity to areas that were too binary.” Robert Beggs, CEO of Toronto-based security consultancy Digital Defence, said the newest update is an incredible step up from the first one and ranks CVSS as the best publicly available vulnerability scoring systems.

But Beggs warned that IT managers using systems like these can quickly run into an affliction called “managing by the numbers.”

“The numbers hide some very important things,” Beggs said. “The problem is not everyone configures the target system the same way, because if everyone configured them securely there would be no vulnerabilities. The issue we’re facing is it just takes one misconfiguration and then something that has a relatively low vulnerability score can take over your network.”

Beggs referenced the 2001 outbreak of the Code Red worm as an example of a vulnerability that would probably be rated low on the CVSS system but ended up finding weakened servers and doing significant damage.

“The patch was out for six to eight months before it ever attacked,” Beggs said. “The reason large organizations fell victim to Code Red wasn’t that they hadn’t applied the patch, it was they had some yahoo in tech support that set up their own server to see how it work or some developer who set up his own server didn’t patch use the patches.”


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo joined ComputerWorld as a staff writer in June 2007 and was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism. He is interested in government IT, copyright, virt... more

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