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Senior vice-president and chief security officer, AT&T

Senior vice-president and chief security officer, AT&T

By:   On: 06 Nov 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

Denial of service is still a threat and botnets are the No. 1 problem on the Internet. AT&T's security chief, Edward Amoroso, makes the case for centralizing security in the carrier sphere

* In 2000, George Gilder published Telecosm: How Infinite Bandwidth Will Revolutionize Our World, which became phenomenally influential among network thinkers. “You can replace the seven-layer smart network with a much faster, dumber, unlayered one,” Gilder wrote. “Let all messages careen around on their own. Let the end-user machines take responsibility for them. Amid the oceans of abundant bandwidth, anyone who wants to drink just needs to invent the right kind of cup.”

As a result, says Amoroso, carrier companies “got into just pushing light” – focusing on packet loss and latency -- and letting the intelligent edge worry about everything else. “So many groups with cybersecurity teams are trying to solve the same problem,” he says. “Any one of us, as an engineer, would tell you that’s about as inefficient as it gets.”

All attacks pass through the carrier infrastructure, he says, and that’s where the focus should be. “Security is one of those things that’s best attended to in a centralized area,” he says. “You don’t send grandpa out on the roof to watch for incoming. You get a police force.”A firewall is no longer a firewall. I don't know what it is.Edward Amoroso>Text

* But selling this to enterprise, which has an ownership attitude toward security regimes, gets pushback -- “Not a little bit of pushback, a lot of pushback. This message is a very bitter pill to swallow,” he says. But if an enterprises want to try to stop denial of service attacks without working with their carriers, he challenges them to explain how they’ll do it. How do you keep children off inappropriate Web sites, when you can’t be there all the time and they’re often more technologically sophisticated than you? “In partnership with the carrier at the DSLAM or the headend,” Amoroso says, and that applies to the enterprise connection, too.

* Firewalls and intrusion detection systems are evolving to do tasks they weren’t conceived for in the first place, Amoroso says. A typical enterprise might have 100 gateways to untrusted connections. Originally, a firewall was designed to act as a choke point for a single connection. “A firewall is no longer a firewall,” he says. “I don’t know what it is.”

There’s a fast food company AT&T works with, Amoroso says, that’s moved to more IP connectivity for drive-through service. Each restaurant now is a node in need of a protective regime. “Rather than do that, we can load-balance firewalls onto their VPN,” he says, with four or five security nodes in a circle around thousands of restaurants. “We’re just managing the capacity and capital,” he says, while the restaurants can update their own policies. “We’re handling the gearhead side of it...We’ve found that SMBs absolutely love this.”










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