RE: [fw-wiz] The Death Of A Firewall

hugh_fraser_at_dofasco.ca
Date: 10/27/05

  • Next message: Vahid Pazirandeh: "[fw-wiz] Upgrading PIX software"
    To: <firewall-wizards@honor.icsalabs.com>
    Date: Thu, 27 Oct 2005 16:31:21 -0400
    
    

    There's a lot in the article that's left to speculation. I admire their
    internal network design; multiple security zones with clearly-defined
    services separated by application-layer firewalls, network ACLs to
    control traffic flows. Being able to accurately profile traffic
    traversing the network allows strict firewall rules and network ACLs,
    and greatly enhances the IDS or IPS ability to identify bogus traffic.
    He's also got an compartmentalized network that may allow him to contain
    a virus or worm, preventing, for instance, a workstation infected with a
    virus from spreading it to the core business servers.

    It's not clear what he's done with the clients. They're running a
    hardened OS, with the latest AV and presumably a firewall. He hasn't
    said they've got cart-blanche to run anything they want; perhaps the
    clients are locked down to a selection of approved apps, but they have
    broader selection than most of us would. With all the effort they've put
    in to the rest of their network, I have to assume that they've
    recognized the threats from the workstation and have instrumented and
    profiled them as well as they have elsewhere.

    Unfortunately, this isn't usually the case. It's the exceptions that get
    you. The users with extra rights that turn off the firewall, the admin
    people who've opened up some extra inbound ports in their firewall to
    allow a "special" app to work, the machines that for some reason didn't
    get the latest AV signature.

    And I can just imagine the complaints from our network group as their
    switches (which we rely on for traffic flow management, not security)
    start to see some of the pounding our perimeter firewall receives.

    So it's tough to understand why, with all the effort they've put in to
    hardening the interior, he would resist adding the incremental cost of
    one more firewall to protect the perimeter and potentially have the best
    of all worlds (a crunchy exterior and interior), unless it's really is
    for "Taking that crutch away has forced us to rethink our security
    model".

    I'd be inclined to find another way to sell that lesson.

    -----Original Message-----
    From: firewall-wizards-admin@honor.icsalabs.com
    [mailto:firewall-wizards-admin@honor.icsalabs.com] On Behalf Of Pedski
    Sent: Monday, October 17, 2005 9:30 PM
    To: James Paterson
    Cc: firewall-wizards@honor.icsalabs.com
    Subject: Re: [fw-wiz] The Death Of A Firewall

    James Paterson wrote:

    >http://www.securitypipeline.com/165700439
    >
    >Be interesting to get the communities take on this article.
    >
    >_______________________________________________
    >firewall-wizards mailing list firewall-wizards@honor.icsalabs.com
    >http://honor.icsalabs.com/mailman/listinfo/firewall-wizards
    >
    >
    >
    This is a model that has holes...
    router acl are not statefull.
    they seem to have some secutiy by means of DMZ
    the managemnt overhead of this is high..sometimes is not that easy
    deploying patches if the vulnerabilty came in the night...meaning if you

    are blocking everything with a firewall you bought yourself some
    time....in this case they are open ...the term raise their immunity to
    exists in hashers condition sounds really nice...but often attacks or
    worms come like a thief in the night......

    there is something flawed with this architecture.
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  • Next message: Vahid Pazirandeh: "[fw-wiz] Upgrading PIX software"

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