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By Geoff Barrall, CTO, BlueArc.
Everybody knows that it is easier to hit a
stationary target than a fast-moving target. Yet, an enormous amount
of resources are being used to encrypt data in motion, while any
smart hacker (in its negative context of somebody trying to obtain
data not intended for them) can tell you that data at rest is that
much easier to decode and transmit to a second location.
While the Internet has enabled hacking in regards
to corporate data, the actual risks are still largely unknown and
efforts seem to be targeted in the wrong places - with complex and
costly (in terms of CPU load) encryption schemes that serve little
purpose.
For example, just the other day, I was watching
a popular technology show on cable television that explained how
Ethernet broadcasts all communications between two computers to
all of the nearby computers, thus allowing a hacker with a sniffer
(a piece of software that captures network traffic) to see other
users' data.
While this was true in the old shared loop
days, prior to 1994, in most small, medium and large enterprises
today, data is almost always transferred on switched networks, with
Ethernet switches retailing for less than $100, and thus is transferred
from point to point - with no visibility of that data by other network-attached
devices. This fact alone prevents almost all sniffer-based hacking
attempts from outside the corporate data centre (and let's face
it - if the hacker is actually physically in the data centre itself,
you have a very serious and very different problem). The only way
to circumvent this would be for the hacker to load their sniffer
program onto the actual server itself, but even in this scenario,
there would be much simpler ways to access the data directly.
Given this fact, the enormous amount of resources
put into encrypting data in flight, travelling over the network,
seems disproportionate. For example, iSCSI incorporates IPSec security,
which can encrypt data as it is transferred between two devices,
preventing a hacker with a sniffer from seeing the contents of that
data - never mind that the hacker would first be lucky to get access
to the data being routed from point to point, but they also would
have to know ahead of time which packets to capture and decrypt
from the thousands of packets per second travelling over a particular
network segment.
For a long time, this danger was perceived
as so great that IPSec was almost mandatory for iSCSI traffic, this
requirement being removed just prior to the standard's ratification,
when the extreme cost to implement any reasonable data rate was
fully realised.
Rather than trying to decode thousands of network
packets from many different sources, it is a much easier course
for the hacker to get to the data where it is resting in an easy
to read format on the edge device such as a server. Hacking a standard
server is much simpler to do. Locating the data and uploading it
to a secondary location is much simpler than trying to decode network
traffic packet by packet. Given this, the lack of focus on encrypting
data while at rest is surprising.
In fact, California has recently passed legislation
to force companies to encrypt certain types of data, such as credit
card numbers, Social Security Numbers, etc. However, even encryption
on disk is only going to prevent the data from being read if somebody
were to steal the hard disk, an unlikely event. A clever hacker
with a hijacked user account can still log onto the server and read
the data as the file system will decrypt the data as it is read
from disk and transfer it in its decoded state.
With all the attention being paid to encryption
of data in motion, we need new software that introduces keys on
both workstations and servers to ensure only trusted users can access
the data from trusted workstations. This would raise the security
bar and foil remote hacking attempts. In the majority of cases,
a continued stream of additional encryption schemes are unlikely
to help.
BlueArc is exhibiting at Storage Expo 2003
the UK's largest dedicated data storage event, delivering the latest
data storage products on the market to over 3,000 end users, Olympia
London from 15-16 October 2003. www.storage-expo.com

•Date:
20th June 2003 •Region: Worldwide •Type:
Article •Topic: ISM
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