Ten Immutable Laws of Security
Law #1: If a bad guy can
persuade you to run his program on your computer, its not your computer
anymore.
It's an unfortunate fact of computer science: when a computer program
runs, it will do what it's programmed to do, even if it's programmed to be
harmful. When you choose to run a program, you are making a decision to turn
over control of your computer to it. Once a program is running, it can do
anything, up to the limits of what you yourself can do on the machine. It
could monitor your keystrokes and send them to a web site. It could open
every document on the machine, and change the word "will" to "won't" in all
of them. It could send rude emails to all your friends. It could install a
virus. It could create a "back door" that lets someone remotely control your
machine. It could dial up an ISP in Katmandu. Or it could just reformat your
hard drive.
That's why it's important to never run, or even download, a program from
an untrusted source – and by "source", I mean the person who wrote it,
not the person who gave it to you. There's a nice analogy between running a
program and eating a sandwich. If a stranger walked up to you and handed you
a sandwich, would you eat it? Probably not. How about if your best friend
gave you a sandwich? Maybe you would, maybe you wouldn't – it depends
on whether she made it or found it lying in the street. Apply the same
critical thought to a program that you would to a sandwich, and you'll
usually be safe.
Law #2: If a bad guy can
alter the operating system on your computer, its not your computer
anymore.
In the end, an operating system is just a series of ones and zeroes that,
when interpreted by the processor, cause the machine to do certain things.
Change the ones and zeroes, and it will do something different. Where are the
ones and zeroes stored? Why, on the machine, right along with everything
else! They're just files, and if other people who use the machine are
permitted to change those files, it's "game over".
To understand why, consider that operating system files are among the most
trusted ones on the computer, and they generally run with system-level
privileges. That is, they can do absolutely anything. Among other things,
they're trusted to manage user accounts, handle password changes, and enforce
the rules governing who can do what on the computer. If a bad guy can change
them, the now-untrustworthy files will do his bidding, and there's no limit
to what he can do. He can steal passwords, make himself an administrator on
the machine, or add entirely new functions to the operating system. To
prevent this type of attack, make sure that the system files (and the
registry, for that matter) are well protected. (The security checklists on the Microsoft Security web site will help you do this).
Law #3: If a bad guy has
unrestricted physical access to your computer, its not your computer
anymore.
Oh, the things a bad guy can do if he can lay his hands on your computer!
Here's a sampling, going from Stone Age to Space Age:
- He could mount the ultimate low-tech denial of service attack, and
smash your computer with a sledgehammer.
- He could unplug the computer, haul it out of your building, and hold it
for ransom.
- He could boot the computer from a floppy disk, and reformat your hard
drive. But wait, you say, I've configured the BIOS on my computer to prompt
for a password when I turn the power on. No problem – if he can open
the case and get his hands on the system hardware, he could just replace
the BIOS chips. (Actually, there are even easier ways).
- He could remove the hard drive from your computer, install it into his
computer, and read it.
- He could make a duplicate of your hard drive and take it back his lair.
Once there, he'd have all the time in the world to conduct brute-force
attacks, such as trying every possible logon password. Programs are
available to automate this and, given enough time, it's almost certain that
he would succeed. Once that happens, Laws #1 and #2 above apply
- He could replace your keyboard with one that contains a radio
transmitter. He could then monitor everything you type, including your
password.
- Always make sure that a computer is physically protected in a way
that's consistent with its value – and remember that the value of a
machine includes not only the value of the hardware itself, but the value
of the data on it, and the value of the access to your network that a bad
guy could gain. At a minimum, business-critical machines like domain
controllers, database servers, and print/file servers should always be in a
locked room that only people charged with administration and maintenance
can access. But you may want to consider protecting other machines as well,
and potentially using additional protective measures.
If you travel with a laptop, it's absolutely critical that you protect it.
The same features that make laptops great to travel with – small size,
light weight, and so forth – also make them easy to steal. There are a
variety of locks and alarms available for laptops, and some models let you
remove the hard drive and carry it with you. You also can use features like
the Encrypting File System in Windows 2000 to mitigate the damage if someone
succeeded in stealing the computer. But the only way you can know with 100%
certainty that your data is safe and the hardware hasn't been tampered with
is to keep the laptop on your person at all times while traveling.
Law #4: If you allow a bad
guy to upload programs to your web site, its not your web site any more.
This is basically Law #1 in reverse. In that scenario, the bad guy tricks
his victim into downloading a harmful program onto his machine and running
it. In this one, the bad guy uploads a harmful program to a machine and runs
it himself. Although this scenario is a danger anytime you allow strangers to
connect to your machine, web sites are involved in the overwhelming majority
of these cases. Many people who operate web sites are too hospitable for
their own good, and allow visitors to upload programs to the site and run
them. As we've seen above, unpleasant things can happen if a bad guy's
program can run on your machine.
If you run a web site, you need to limit what visitors can do. You should
only allow a program on your site if you wrote it yourself, or if you trust
the developer who wrote it. But that may not be enough. If your web site is
one of several hosted on a shared server, you need to be extra careful. If a
bad guy can compromise one of the other sites on the server, it's possible he
could extend his control to the server itself, in which he could control all
of the sites on it – including yours. If you're on a shared server,
it's important to find out what the server administrator's policies are. (By
the way, before opening your site to the public, make sure you've followed
the security checklists for IIS 4.0 and IIS 5.0).
Law #5: Weak passwords trump
strong security.
The purpose of having a logon process is to establish who you are. Once
the operating system knows who you are, it can grant or deny requests for
system resources appropriately. If a bad guy learns your password, he can log
on as you. In fact, as far as the operating system is concerned, he is you.
Whatever you can do on the system, he can do as well, because he's you. Maybe
he wants to read sensitive information you've stored on your computer, like
your email. Maybe you have more privileges on the network than he does, and
being you will let him do things he normally couldn't. Or maybe he just wants
to do something malicious and blame it on you. In any case, it's worth
protecting your credentials.
Always use a password – it's amazing how many accounts have blank
passwords. And choose a complex one. Don't use your dog's name, your
anniversary date, or the name of the local football team. And don't use the
word "password"! Pick a password that has a mix of upper- and lower-case
letters, number, punctuation marks, and so forth. Make it as long as
possible. And change it often. Once you've picked a strong password, handle
it appropriately. Don't write it down. If you absolutely must write it down,
at the very least keep it in a safe or a locked drawer – the first
thing a bad guy who's hunting for passwords will do is check for a yellow
sticky note on the side of your screen, or in the top desk drawer. Don't tell
anyone what your password is. Remember what Ben Franklin said: two people can
keep a secret, but only if one of them is dead.
Finally, consider using something stronger than passwords to identify
yourself to the system. Windows 2000, for instance, supports the use of smart
cards, which significantly strengthens the identity checking the system can
perform. You may also want to consider biometric products like fingerprint
and retina scanners.
Law #6: A machine is only as
secure as the administrator is trustworthy.
Every computer must have an administrator: someone who can install
software, configure the operating system, add and manage user accounts,
establish security policies, and handle all the other management tasks
associated with keeping a computer up and running. By definition, these tasks
require that he have control over the machine. This puts the administrator in
a position of unequalled power. An untrustworthy administrator can negate
every other security measure you've taken. He can change the permissions on
the machine, modify the system security policies, install malicious software,
add bogus users, or do any of a million other things. He can subvert
virtually any protective measure in the operating system, because he controls
it. Worst of all, he can cover his tracks. If you have an untrustworthy
administrator, you have absolutely no security.
When hiring a system administrator, recognize the position of trust that
administrators occupy, and only hire people who warrant that trust. Call his
references, and ask them about his previous work record, especially with
regard to any security incidents at previous employers. If appropriate for
your organization, you may also consider taking a step that banks and other
security-conscious companies do, and require that your administrators pass a
complete background check at hiring time, and at periodic intervals
afterward. Whatever criteria you select, apply them across the board. Don't
give anyone administrative privileges on your network unless they've been
vetted – and this includes temporary employees and contractors,
too.
Next, take steps to help keep honest people honest. Use sign-in/sign-out
sheets to track who's been in the server room. (You do have a server room
with a locked door, right? If not, re-read Law #3). Implement a "two person"
rule when installing or upgrading software. Diversify management tasks as
much as possible, as a way of minimizing how much power any one administrator
has. Also, don't use the Administrator account – instead, give each
administrator a separate account with administrative privileges, so you can
tell who's doing what. Finally, consider taking steps to make it more
difficult for a rogue administrator to cover his tracks. For instance, store
audit data on write-only media, or house System A's audit data on System B,
and make sure that the two systems have different administrators. The more
accountable your administrators are, the less likely you are to have
problems.
Law #7: Encrypted data is
only as secure as the decryption key.
Suppose you installed the biggest, strongest, most secure lock in the
world on your front door, but you put the key under the front door mat. It
wouldn't really matter how strong the lock is, would it? The critical factor
would be the poor way the key was protected, because if a burglar could find
it, he'd have everything he needed to open the lock. Encrypted data works the
same way – no matter how strong the cryptoalgorithm is, the data is
only as safe as the key that can decrypt it.
Many operating systems and cryptographic software products give you an
option to store cryptographic keys on the computer. The advantage is
convenience – you don't have to handle the key – but it comes at
the cost of security. The keys are usually obfuscated (that is, hidden), and
some of the obfuscation methods are quite good. But in the end, no matter how
well-hidden the key is, if it's on the machine it can be found. It has to be
– after all, the software can find it, so a sufficiently-motivated bad
guy could find it, too. Whenever possible, use offline storage for keys. If
the key is a word or phrase, memorize it. If not, export it to a floppy disk,
make a backup copy, and store the copies in separate, secure locations. (All
of you administrators out there who are using Syskey in "local storage" mode
– you're going to reconfigure your server right this minute,
right?)
Law #8: An out of date virus
scanner is only marginally better than no virus scanner at all.
Virus scanners work by comparing the data on your computer against a
collection of virus "signatures". Each signature is characteristic of a
particular virus, and when the scanner finds data in a file, email, or
elsewhere that matches the signature, it concludes that it's found a virus.
However, a virus scanner can only scan for the viruses it knows about. It's
vital that you keep your virus scanner's signature file up to date, as new
viruses are created every day.
The problem actually goes a bit deeper than this, though. Typically, a new
virus will do the greatest amount of damage during the early stages of its
life, precisely because few people will be able to detect it. Once word gets
around that a new virus is on the loose and people update their virus
signatures, the spread of the virus falls off drastically. The key is to get
ahead of the curve, and have updated signature files on your machine before
the virus hits.
Virtually every maker of anti-virus software provides a way to get free
updated signature files from their web site. In fact, many have "push"
services, in which they'll send notification every time a new signature file
is released. Use these services. Also, keep the virus scanner itself –
that is, the scanning software – updated as well. Virus writers
periodically develop new techniques that require that the scanners change how
they do their work.
Law #9: Absolute anonymity
isn't practical, in real life or on the web.
All human interaction involves exchanging data of some kind. If someone
weaves enough of that data together, they can identify you. Think about all
the information that a person can glean in just a short conversation with
you. In one glance, they can gauge your height, weight, and approximate age.
Your accent will probably tell them what country you're from, and may even
tell them what region of the country. If you talk about anything other than
the weather, you'll probably tell them something about your family, your
interests, where you live, and what you do for a living. It doesn't take long
for someone to collect enough information to figure out who you are. If you
crave absolute anonymity, your best bet is to live in a cave and shun all
human contact.
The same thing is true of the Internet. If you visit a web site, the owner
can, if he's sufficiently motivated, find out who you are. After all, the
ones and zeroes that make up the web session have be able to find their way
to the right place, and that place is your computer. There are a lot of
measures you can take to disguise the bits, and the more of them you use, the
more thoroughly the bits will be disguised. For instance, you could use
network address translation to mask your actual IP address, subscribe to an
anonymizing service that launders the bits by relaying them from one end of
the ether to the other, use a different ISP account for different purposes,
surf certain sites only from public kiosks, and so on. All of these make it
more difficult to determine who you are, but none of them make it impossible.
Do you know for certain who operates the anonymizing service? Maybe it's the
same person who owns the web site you just visited! Or what about that
innocuous web site you visited yesterday, that offered to mail you a free $10
off coupon? Maybe the owner is willing to share information with other web
site owners. If so, the second web site owner may be able to correlate the
information from the two sites and determine who you are.
Does this mean that privacy on the web is a lost cause? Not at all. What
it means is that the best way to protect your privacy on the Internet is the
same as the way you protect your privacy in normal life - through your
behavior. Read the privacy statements on the web sites you visit, and only do
business with ones whose practices you agree with. If you're worried about
cookies, disable them. Most importantly, avoid indiscriminate web surfing -
recognize that just as most cities have a bad side of town that's best
avoided, the Internet does too. But if it's complete and total anonymity you
want, better start looking for that cave.
Law #10: Technology is not a
panacea.
Technology can do some amazing things. Recent years have seen the
development of ever-cheaper and more powerful hardware, software that
harnesses the hardware to open new vistas for computer users, as well as
advancements in cryptography and other sciences. It's tempting to believe
that technology can deliver a risk-free world, if we just work hard enough.
However, this is simply not realistic.
Perfect security requires a level of perfection that simply doesn't exist,
and in fact isn't likely to ever exist. This is true for software as well as
virtually all fields of human interest. Software development is an imperfect
science, and all software has bugs. Some of them can be exploited to cause
security breaches. That's just a fact of life. But even if software could be
made perfect, it wouldn't solve the problem entirely. Most attacks involve,
to one degree or another, some manipulation of human nature – this is
usually referred to as social engineering. Raise the cost and difficulty of
attacking security technology, and bad guys will respond by shifting their
focus away from the technology and toward the human being at the console.
It's vital that you understand your role in maintaining solid security, or
you could become the chink in your own systems' armor.
The solution is to recognize two essential points. First, security
consists of both technology and policy – that is, it's the combination
of the technology and how it's used that ultimately determines how secure
your systems are. Second, security is journey, not a destination – it
isn't a problem that can be "solved" once and for all; it's a constant series
of moves and countermoves between the good guys and the bad guys. The key is
to ensure that you have good security awareness and exercise sound
judgment.Combine great technology with sound judgment, and you'll have
rock-solid security.
The Ten Immutable Laws of Security
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