OpenX Ad Server Source Compromised

Weak LinkOpenX is a tool used by hosting providers and webpage developers to provide ads on webpages.  Rotating banner ads have been an attack vector that has been quite popular and effective in the recent past.  This is probably one reason why.

An announcement this week from the OpenX ad server team noted that a backdoor had recently been discovered in their official source code distributions, that has been present since November 2012.  This vulnerability only applies to the free downloadable open source product, OpenX Source.

Exploitation is occurring in the wild, with attacks consisting of simple POST requests to a specific file that allows for remote code execution on the affected server. Users are urged to follow instructions being provided by the community for checking their servers, and rebuilding any that are impacted immediately.

References:

Importance of Security in Small Business

Weak LinkNo business is too small to implement good basic information security practices. Small businesses are linked to other small and larger businesses.  They provide an immediate source of soft targets, and can even stream an attacker into the supply chain.

Like the Infographic at B2C shows, threats lurk around every corner, endangering the survival of small businesses. B2C also provides some startling statistics related to the attitude of small  businesses towards information security.

  • 24.6 million small businesses in the US.
    • 25% do not shred their documents.
    • 27% have never completed an information security risk assessment.
    • 36% have no policies for  storage or disposal.
    • 31% have never trained employees regarding the importance of information  security.
  • There are 2.3 million small businesses across Canada.
    • 47% believe a security breach would not impact their business.
    • 28% are not aware of legal compliance and legislation issues that apply to their business.
    • 35% don’t have a protocol for storage and disposal of confidential  data.
    • 56% don’t have a secure method of document disposal.

Is it any wonder why so many small businesses fail, and we have so many issues with security?

Enterprise Information Security, is it BROKEN??

An industry reporter asked me a couple of pointed questions recently as part of an Weak Linkinterview for a feature article.  He wanted to know if I felt that Enterprise Information Security was broken, and what could be done to fix it.

“Given the increasing number of denial of service attacks, Java exploits, break-ins, malware delivered by spam etc. , is Enterprise Security broken?”

No, I don’t believe that Enterprise Security is broken.  I do believe that some of the fundamental assumptions that we in the Information Technology industry made early on in IT and communication development were flawed and are now being abused.  Enterprise Information Security is a strategic model whose intent is to formalize and promote security practices in a consistent manner across an organization remains a fundamentally correct objective.

One of the biggest concerns that I have had over my 30+ year IT career has been that of consistency.  Remember that Information Security as a recognized discipline didn’t exist when Information Technology was born, and came about well after IT and technology had started to mature.  We built the communications protocols at the heart of TCPIP to support and focus on resilience, continuity, and speed.  The naive belief was, if a set of rules was cast that delivered reliable communication, the job was pretty much done.  The entire concept was based on trust.  What else could you possibly want?

What was missing was consideration of the human factor; an authentication layer, a repudiation criteria, the guarantee of confidentiality, the assurance of data integrity, and the practices of controlled access and least privilege.

People are creative, curious, and in many cases, selfish creatures.  If they find a weakness in an application, or a way to take advantage of a process that will provide them with notoriety, wealth, or some other desired benefit, I guarantee that it will be exploited.  Look at how games get hacked for online gold, extra advantage, or simply bragging rights, to underline the problem.  The abuser doesn’t consider or perhaps even care that the author views the game as a years of work and a revenue stream, and doesn’t gauge the impact that player actions have on the developers’ livelihood.  They just want the desired item.

Until we can replace or rebuild the TCPIP suite with those missing pieces at its core, we need to put in place a governance and architectural model, policies, processes, standards, controls and guidance that when taken together, provide a consistent information security architecture.  That architecture should apply evenly across the enterprise, not only to this group or that region, and should be able to manage and adapt to the upcoming disruptive factors that will make up our IT world in the future.

“What are some of these recent disruptive factors?”

  • BYOD – Employees recently fell in love with the idea of using their own smartphones and tablets for work.  Management embraced the concept, since it enhanced the bottom line, eliminating the need to purchase and maintain hardware that tends to become obsolete within a calendar year anyway. 

BYOD introduced consumer tech into the enterprise, and although I like others resisted it, we all knew it was inevitably going to happen.   These new consumer devices come with all of the warts that you would expect from a consumer device; no standard image, little focus on security and data protection, few points of control, fewer points of integration, and no separation of personal versus corporate identities.

Employees are just now beginning to question how deep they will let work intrude into their personal lives.  Did IT just turn their beloved smartphone into a tracking device?  Can the company now monitor and examine their personal emails, chats, and browsing habits?   Employees are beginning to resent that personal time is now becoming potentially unpaid work time.  Managing these challenges must be part of the new Information Security Architecture.

  • MalwareMalicious software has evolved from a nuisance to a plague.  It’s been monetized, and has grown into a full blown industry unto itself.  Malware is now custom developed, the developers are organized, and they coordinate their efforts.  Some of them specialize, and offer their services to one another, mercenary style.  Our vendors need to do the same, and change the model from signature based detection to signature, characteristic (white-listing), and behavior based protection.  All of them, not one of them.

Vendors also need to move away from the “backwards compatible with everything” development model.  Bloating code to support multiple Operating Systems, especially those that are no longer being developed or supported by their creators, perpetuates vulnerabilities on several fronts.  It potentially brings all of the previous versions’ vulnerabilities into the new version, it perpetuates the existence of out dated software amongst businesses and home users, and it complicates business processes like asset and license management.  All of these result in a larger attack surface to be exploited, and liabilities to customer organizations.

Malware distribution is undergoing a major shift, from being widely distributed so as to have the maximum effect on a target rich environment, from quick in – acquire target – quick out blitzing strategies, to custom-made, no signature available, targeted to a specific industry, business, or user to limit solution development, and placed where it will be most effectively consumed by the target.  The new malware is being tweaked to avoid detection, doing nothing observably destructive, and maintaining a discrete profile for as long as possible.  It stays in the environment, collecting information, trickling out intelligence, and potentially offering backdoor access for its author or owner.  These little nasties tend to stay embedded within an organization for years.

  • Data Leakage –  I used to worry about the impacts malware had, the downtime it incurred, the mess it made, and the time it takes to clean up after an infection.  Incident Response, Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery practices have matured, alleviating the bulk of those concerns, and now I don’t have to worry as much about what sort of malware gets into the environment.  Over the years, I have adopted an attitude that concerns itself more and more with egress management.  I now worry more about what data is getting out.  In order to maximize my nightly pillow time, I develop or procure capabilities to monitor traffic flows, and to identify the types of documents, contents of documents, and other materials that should not be leaving the network.

The challenges here are accounting for every egress method, every potential removal vehicle, every characteristic that makes a document sensitive, and dealing with each one in an appropriate and manageable fashion.  The electronic communications are the low hanging fruit, they are easily monitored.  It is the physical devices that pose the greatest challenges.

  • Next Generation Firewalls – The Internet Protocol suite was built to support communication using a set of rules, identifying specific ports and protocols, packet and frame sizes, and expecting specific content to be in each frame.  The developers assumed that applications and people would operate within those rules.  We also assumed that technology would present a perimeter that could be easily controlled and managed.  If the protocol used matched the port designated for it, and that port/protocol set was allowed to pass through the firewall, it was all good.  Unfortunately, attackers do not play by those rules.  They use them against us.

Next Generation Firewalls are emerging that analyze relationships and behaviors.  They inspect traffic to ensure that someone or something is accountable for each packet on the network, that it fits within an expected data request stream, conforms to much more granular rules based on expected and observed behavior, and that it is shaped and formed the way the rules expect it to be.

  • The Cloud – Every silver lining has a cloud, and every cloud has security implications.  We experimented in the past with out-sourcing our IT worker bees in order to save costs.  In some places that was successful, and not so successful in others.  We are now doing the same thing with applications, services, data, and infrastructure.  The risks to those assets remain the same, but we are now concentrating those assets along with many other assets in one place, and giving up visibility and control, while increasing the value of the hosting target.

The arguments make sense, we are not an IT company, why do we need to invest in so much hardware, software, and staff to maintain it?  Someone else can do this better, focus entirely on it, and save us money by providing it to the masses as a Service. The other side of the coin is that the risks don’t go away, the liabilities don’t go away, but the ability to directly control and manage the out-sourced entities becomes more difficult.  Accountability becomes fuzzy, but ultimately lies with the data owner, not the hosting comapny.  In a cloud-based model, you are trusting someone else to do a better job of managing and protecting your data, you are trusting them not to mis-use your data, and you are trusting them to provide access to the right people while blocking access of the wrong folks.  Audit and Compliance issues become evident.

Ultimately, if this new juicy data target is breached by someone attacking you or one of the many other customers that use this service, your data may be exposed, and your business is liable and accountable.  Your data may not even be exposed, but if you use the breached vendors’ services, the perception may be that you were breached.  Your customers won’t care if the breach happened at your data center or your provider’s.  You were trusted with their data, and it was at risk of exposure on your watch.  You may also increase your dependency on the cloud service, and that increases your susceptibility to denial of service attacks.

  • Attacker Motivation & Capability – The enemy has found that those annoying virus and worm characteristics developed in the past for notoriety or destructive power can be used for financial gain, espionage, and they have gotten organized.  The dark side has put forth significant effort into developing a diverse set of tools, expertise, and strategies.  We need to model our defenses after those of the attackers.  Vendors need to start integrating, working together, and providing the enterprise with consumable, actionable, accurate intelligence about what is going on inside and outside of their networks.  SIEM is a step in the right direction, but let’s not stop walking forward.

 “Do we need a fundamental change in the way enterprises approach/design security?”

Here, I would say yes, and I believe that this change has been cooking along for quite some time in a very slow, “bolt-it-on” fashion.  Technology changes seem to be revolutionary, coming out of nowhere and establishing themselves quickly in response to disruptive factors and needs.  Changes in protection capabilities tend to be evolutionary, taking their own sweet time to develop and mature in reaction to unforeseen circumstances that arise post-implementation of technology.  Physicist Niels Bohr said, “Prediction is very difficult, especially if it’s about the future.”

We in IT as an industry, and businesses in general, need to realize that the perimeter is continuing to melt, to focus on monitoring the network and protecting the data, to insist on integration, increased visibility, and to demand built-in security from our products, vendors, service providers, and business partners.  Enterprise Information Security offers a conduit through architecture and governance to provide a well thought out strategy that can adapt and react to disruptive advancements in technology.  It lays the ground work, and operates best by implementing consistent governance over people, processes and technology at the enterprise level for the purpose of supporting management, operation, and the protection of information and assets.

Security Under Fire

Questions and Answers signpostHere is an interesting article that talks about emerging technologies and the vulnerabilities, threats, and risks that they increase as they are adopted.  Several experts are interviewed in the article, and although their experiences vary, they are consistent for the most part in their opinions that businesses are scrambling to adopt these technologies fast, and to figure out how to secure them.  Good work Howard!

Computing Canada – May 2013 Read it now: http://epubs.itworldcanada.com/i/129542/23

Anonymous ‘FFF’ Attack Schedule

Oh, for crying out loud.  Why don’t these guys just go away?   According to Wired, Anonymous is giving itself a weekly deadline now, a new attack every Friday.  How entertaining.  Following the Tuesday compromise of tear gas maker Combined Systems’ website, Antisec attacked a Federal Trade Commission webserver which hosts 3 FTC websites.  They claim this hack was in opposition of the controversial international ACTA copyright treaty, widely protested around the world for its potential impact on freedom of expression.

Those responsible for this week’s attacks spoke with Wired, and claimed that the attacks renewed a promise, previously noted in the defacement of CSI, and reiterated on the FTC websites, “every Friday will bring a new attack against government and corporate sites under the theme of #FFF” (‘F’ the Feds Friday).

They’ve decided try to balance between protest defacements like these two most recent ones, and posting material that can damage firms and agencies.   Jerry Irvine of the National Cyber Security Task Force told the New York Times last week that attacks would become more frequent, describing the collective as “unstoppable,” because of the poor state of online security.

-=[ Busted ]=- Six Trillion In Fake Bonds

On the other side of the pond, a record $6 trillion of fake US Treasury bonds were seized by Italian anti-mafia prosecutors.  The bonds were uncovered in hidden compartments in three safety deposit boxes in Zurich.  Bloomberg reports that Italian authorities arrested eight people in connection with the probe, dubbed Operation Vulcanica.

The Italian authorities also uncovered fraudulent checks issued through HSBC Holdings in London, and another $2 billion of fake bonds in Rome.  Those involved in the financial fraud case were apparently planning to buy plutonium from Nigeria, according to police monitored phone conversations.

Good work guys.  I hope they round up all involved, especially those with the plutonium.  You know that stuff isn’t going to be used to power wind up toys.

North American Medical Records At Risk

While you are sitting patiently during your typical 5-6 hour emergency room visit, ever wonder just how safe your records are at the doctor’s office?  Are ya ready to puke?

91% of small healthcare practices (less than 250 employees) in North America say they have suffered a data breach in the past 12 months.

The Ponemon Institute recently conducted a survey, commissioned by MegaPath, asking more than 700 healthcare organizations’ IT and administrative staff about breaches.  Among the findings:

  • 70% say their organizations either don’t have or are unsure if they have, sufficient budget to meet governance, risk, and compliance requirements.
  • 55% of respondents had to notify patients of a data breach in the previous 12 months.
  • 52% of respondents rated their security technology plans as “ineffective”.
  • 43% of respondents had experienced medical identity theft in their organizations.
  • 31% say management considers data security and privacy a top priority.  (69% not so much?)
  • 29% say breaches have resulted in medical identity theft.
  • More than a third have not assigned responsibility for patient data protection to anyone in particular.
  • Approximately half say less than 10% of IT’s budget goes to data security tools.

Data breaches of patient information cost healthcare organizations nearly $6 billion annually, and many breaches go undetected.  Protecting patient data appears to remain a low priority for hospitals and doctors’ offices, and these organizations have little confidence in their ability to secure patient records.  They are putting individuals at increased risk for medical identity theft, financial theft, and exposure of private information.

Are ya feeling warm and fuzzy yet?  Read the whole report.

Canadian’s Online Privacy At Risk

From the “I can’t believe this is Canada” file, the government is pushing a new “lawful access” bill, basically granting the police and government officials the rights and means to freely and on a hunch, spy on your internet usage.  Assuming that if you have nothing to hide, you should have no fear of arbitrary search and seizure, of course.

Michael Geist has a good article about the bill and why it is crazy.  The insanity first becomes evident when Public Safety Minister Vic Toews tells people “You can stand with us, or you can stand with the child pornographers“.   As if everyone with a desire for online privacy and against widespread internet surveillance is somehow automatically “for” child pron!  Yep, there is no middle ground here.  Line up with the rest of ’em, mate.

I agree with Tech Dirt’s post, this is totally ridiculous, and a cynical political move that assumes the Canadian public is stupid and will just roll over.  I sincerely hope that is not true, that there is enough outcry against this bill that it is thrown out faster than last week’s Metro.  Yes, it may be difficult and time consuming to obtain a judge’s consent in the form of a warrant, but you don’t just subtract an individual’s rights from the equation in the name of expediancy and convenience for law enforcement.  You cannot and should not assume that the entire public is suspect, and then launch a witch hunt to see who floats and who sinks! Continue reading

Busy Day For Patches

Happy Valentines Day everyone.  Our vendors are bringing us the gifts of security vulnerability patches.  Lots of them.  Yes, it’s extra work for our IT teams, but removing these vulnerabilities could mean that we all get to keep our jobs, and remain in business.  I was hearing on the news today that Nortel is now coming clean regarding the fact that hackers 0wn3d their network for roughly 10 years, with full and complete access to everything.

Wonder how they got that?

Where is Nortel today?  Something to think about…

Microsoft released the expected batch of 9 patches:

  • MS12-008: Critical Remote Code Execution Vulnerabilities in Windows Kernel-Mode Drivers
  • MS12-009: Important Elevation of Privilege Vulnerabilities in Ancillary Function Driver
  • MS12-010: Critical Cumulative Security Update for Internet Explorer
  • MS12-011: Important Elevation of Privilege Vulnerabilities in Microsoft SharePoint
  • MS12-012: Important Remote Code Execution Vulnerability in Color Control Panel
  • MS12-013: Critical Remote Code Execution Vulnerability in C Run-Time Library
  • MS12-014: Important Remote Code Execution Vulnerability in Indeo Codec
  • MS12-015: Important Remote Code Execution Vulnerabilities in Microsoft Visio Viewer 2010
  • MS12-016: Critical Remote Code Execution Vulnerabilities in .NET Framework and Silverlight  (This one I would recommend holding off on, as Microsoft is expected to re-release after identifying a “metadata (logic) error”.)

Microsoft has also released Update Rollup 1 for Exchange Server 2010 SP2 http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=28809 to the Download Center.

Adobe released 2 Security Bulletins:

  • APSB12-02: Critical Security update available for Adobe Shockwave Player.  This update addresses critical vulnerabilities in Adobe Shockwave Player 11.6.3.633 and earlier versions on the Windows and Macintosh operating systems.  These vulnerabilities could allow an attacker, who successfully exploits these vulnerabilities, to run malicious code on the affected system.
  • APSB12-04: Important Security update available for RoboHelp for Word.  This update addresses an important vulnerability in RoboHelp 9 (or 8) for Word on Windows.  A specially crafted URL could be used to create a cross-site scripting attack on Web-based output generated using RoboHelp for Word.

There have also been vulnerabilities and patches announced for Mozilla Thunderbird, Firefox, and an as yet unpatched local exploit POC code release for Yahoo Instant Messanger 11.5.

UPDATE: Oracle released also patches fixing 14 vulnerabilities in:

  •  JDK and JRE 7 Update 2 and earlier
  • JDK and JRE 6 Update 30 and earlier
  • JDK and JRE 5.0 Update 33 and earlier
  • SDK and JRE 1.4.2_35 and earlier
  • JavaFX 2.0.2 and earlier

http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/topics/security/javacpufeb2012-366318.html

Start planning, testing, and patching, folks.