Showing posts with label 2007. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2007. Show all posts

Friday, January 04, 2008

Annual Blog Round-Up - 2007

If monthly, why not annual blog round-up? These are my top popular "Security Warrior" blog posts for 2007! To make this a competition of posts, I am removing the links to the main blog, search labels (e.g. log management, which was indeed one of the most popular resources on the blog) as well as grouping posts together in theme clusters.

  1. Same as during past few months, the "fallout" from being featured on a high-profile programming site continues to drive humongous loads of traffic which made this set of posts the most popular, even for the year.  The topic that got such a huge boost was anti-virus efficiency. The posts are: Answer to My Antivirus Mystery Question and a "Fun" Story, More on Anti-virus and Anti-malware, Let's Play a Fun Game Here ... A Scary Game, The Original Anti-Virus Test Paper is Here!, Protected but Owned: My Little Investigation as well as a final entry about my own switch away from mainstream major-vendor anti-virus tool: A Bit More on AV  and Closure (Kind of) to the Anti-Virus Efficiency/Effectiveness Saga.
  2. Next by rank is a set of my Top11 listsTop 11 Reasons to Collect and Preserve Computer Logs and  Top 11 Reasons to Look at Your Logs (the third list, Top 11 Reasons to Secure and Protect Your Logs, was not quite that popular - I have long argued that, sadly, few people care about log security yet).
  3. Wow! I love, love, love the fact that my blog readers made my first Common Event Expression (CEE), post introducing this emerging log standard, (official site now live!) one of the most popular: Finally, Common Event Expression (CEE) is Out!!!. My other CEE-related posts are labeled here.
  4. Hurray to database logging (finally!) My posts related to database logging top the charts. Specifically, How to Do Database Logging/Monitoring "Right"? as well as its "prequels" :-) Full Paper on Database Log Management Posted and On Database Logging and Auditing (Teaser + NOW Full Paper).
  5. Finally, security ROI saga that flared up mid-year is also among the most popular. Indeed, Security ROI Pile-Up! post made it into Top5 (the related posts are: The Entire Security ROI Blood Trail and ROI, ROSI, RROI and Harry Potter Tales). The rest of my ROI-related posts are labeled here.
  6. At the risk of destroying my math credibility, I will add an item #6 to my Top 5 list, again. This little post called On Open Source in SIEM and Log Management have also generated a lot of traffic and discussion. Indeed, log management vs SIEM as well as reasons for a lack of a popular and complete open source log management solution are fun topics!

See you in 2009! :-)

Possibly related posts / past monthly popular blog round-ups:

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Thursday, January 11, 2007

My Security Predictions for 2007 ... Go!

Finally ... the wait is over. In a few short seconds, my security predictions will be unleashed onto the world. Prepare to be ... underwhelmed (he-he, just kidding!)

Unlike last year, I won't muddy the waters with scores and ratings, but will just say it: predicting is easy if you go for the obvious trends that everybody sees ("hackers will hack, phishers will phish, spammers will spam, bot herders will bot herd, other criminals will, eh, do crimes!" and - yes! - both bad and good stuff will happen in ample quantities). Last year I erred on the side of caution and got every single prediction right. Promise I will be more aggressive - and thus more fun - this time :-)

I. Platforms: Vista will have no impact on the overall risk level of most organizations out there. Yes, some holes will certainly be plugged (and I even agree that "Vista is the most secure version ever", just like every single one of its predecessors was - in its time), but others - possibly of types we don't even know about - will crop up. Sorry, but secure platform =/= secure Internet (kinda like you wearing a Kevlar vest doesn't lower crime in the neighborhood).

II. New technologies: no credible technology that can alone "solve" the problem of insider threat will emerge (many will try); the insider threat problem is just too broad, diverse and rich to be solved by a single technology or even a single vendor (corollary: if somebody is trying to sell you such a technology that claims to do exactly that on its own, then - well, you know what to do ...)

III. Security market: we will see more than a few firesales and possibly total and miserable security vendor failures (wonna bet which legacy SIEM vendor will die first? :-)) There are way too many companies who sell some random and often irrelevant "protection" which sometimes doesn't even work ... at their own demo ... when their CTO demos it ... the third time ...

IV. Risk management: a confusion about what is "risk management" will not subside this year. Business risk? Information risk? Risk as threat x vulnerability x asset? Risk as probability of loss? Arrrghh! - It goes on and on and on. No standard accepted definition of risk management in the field of infosec will emerge.

V. NAC: of course, no list of 2007 prediction is valid without mentioning knack :-) And you know what? NAC will shrink, NOT grow in importance this year! This is where the rubber meets the road and fish start to swim upstream :-) - this prediction started from me reading Richard's piece "NAC is Fighting the Last War" which struck me like a Strength 15 Lighting Bolt. Indeed, narrowly defined NAC largely targets worm infections (and will thus lose relevance) while broadly defined NAC starts to sound like having a well-run network (which is as relevant today as it was in 1992 and probably 2012 as well). The Planet NAC is about to experience a premature eclipse :-)

VI. 0-days: 2006 was the year when this previously obscure term fell victim to malignant marketEErs. 2007 will see more of the same, no doubt. But what about the real 0-day-wielding attackers, poking jokes at the above "oh-day defenders"? Security research into new types of vulnerabilities will certainly continue and more types of previously "safe" (rather, "erroneously thought of as safe") types of content will be used to attack applications. MPG with 0day? AVI with 0day? And, our old friends doc, xls, ppt and now PDF. On the other hand, a major 0-day worm still won't happen.

VII. IP and ID theft, data loss: at the risk of sounding hilariously obvious, I would state that such incidents of ID theft (phishing, etc), broader intellectual property (IP) theft and loss will continue largely unabated. Will we, the security community, try to stop it? Of course, but nowhere near hard enough ...

VIII. Compliance: but of course! Did you think I'd miss this bad boy? Mandatory regulatory initiatives that pack a bite or a punch, such as PCI, will continue to spread and thus grow in importance, while jokes like HIPAA will continue to languish, helping my # VII prediction come true with a bang ... At the same time, I am undecided on the voluntary frameworks that you can choose to comply with (ISO17799/270001, COBIT, ITIL, etc) - will they take off like a rocketship or remain steadily interesting to some? Only time will tell.

IX. Security awareness: well, security awareness will ... ah, come on, just laugh: bua-ha-ha-ha-haaa :-)

X. Finally, I would like to reiterate a few of the last year's predictions that will still ring true this year. Client-side and application-level (especially, web application) vulnerabilities will still be outrunning the server-side and platform-level ones. Major wireless attacks and malware will still not destroy the world.

So, there you have it! Enjoy, comment, slam, compliment, etc! And remember - just as one cannot predict the threats of tomorrow today, one still won’t be able to do in 200X. And in 20XY :-) And - but I am going out on a limb here - in 2XYZ! :-)

All predictions for 2007 that I've seen are tagged here.

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Tuesday, December 19, 2006

My Security Predictions for 2007 .... Not Yet

OK, it looks like I just have to respond to this. The claim was made that one has to unleash his or hers (hmmm...) security predictions for 2007 immediately.
But - guess what- I will be a party pooper and will hold on to mine.

Feel free to see what I collected so far: security predictions 2007 tagged at del.icio.us

So, no, I am not posting my predictions just yet. In this prediciton game, you know that whoever waits the longest (preferably to the end of 2007 :-)) wins (i.e. looks like less of an idiot :-))

Dr Anton Chuvakin