RE: Alignment of Interests in Web Security

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

In response to Jeremiah Grossman’s post on Alignment of Interests in Web Security.

While I think that Jeremiah Grossman is absolutely on to something with his theories of alignment of interests in Web Security, I would argue that attaining the goal would go against human nature. Since the dawn of time, human have been in competition with one another and the only thing that’s really changed is the prize for being “best”. In pre-historic times, it was food, fire, and a safe place to sleep. In the middle ages it was land, crops, and livestock. In modern economies, it’s all about the money. For those actively participating in society, money virtually defines who you are in society. Actors, sports professionals, and CEOs of fortune 500 companies rake in hundreds of thousands of dollars and their quality of life shows it with nice cars and lavish housing. While middle class and below are barely making ends meat and most are working very hard for every dollar they spend.

Things aren’t much different in the business world. Companies who perform well go public and have millions of investors, companies who perform poorly go out of business, and once again, the measure of success is money. The examples cited by Jeremiah (SSL for web traffic, data encryption, and getting rid of IFrames) just further illustrate my point. While these practices would do a great deal for protecting their customers, they cost money and affect the bottom line profits, and therefore are not implemented. Yes, I know that security incidents end up costing the company more money in damage control than it would have cost for the safeguards to be implemented in the first place. This is the line security professionals have been giving senior executives for years. Has it worked? It doesn’t seem like it: Ask any of the 60% of the top 100 most popular websites who’ve hosted malware in the first half of 2008. (Websense security Labs™ (State of internet security -Q1 – Q2, 2008)

At this moment, the greatest asset that has been given to security professionals are regulations. Whether they be industry (PCI-DSS, SOX, etc) or Government (FISMA, NIST standards, etc) these regulations on IT Security have proposed to fine/hold legally responsible companies who do not attempt to enforce a minimum level of safeguards to protect their customers. By no means am I saying that these standards are perfect, there is far too little enforcement, the rules are not always described clearly and there are many cases where auditors are coerced into giving a passing grade to infrastructures which do not meet the requirements. What I am saying is that the idea of fining companies for failing to protect consumer data is the right way to go when you’re dealing with executives who’s primary driver is making money for the company.

I propose the following to answer Jeremiah’s question “How do we get the owners of 187 million websites, 17 million developers, browser vendors, universities, governments, ISPs, compliance auditors, and security researchers all to pull in the same direction towards a more secure Web?”:

  • Establish more laws and industry regulations defining how companies should conduct themselves.
    Admittedly, this is a double edged sword. More checkboxes != more security, but it does give the professionals in the field some solid backing when presenting security concerns to executives.
  • Academics and researchers must collaborate to change the education system.
    Remember the old saying “work to make the world better for your children”? We have an army of little tech savvy kids coming through the education system. Lets teach them about information security and privacy issues so that as they move into consumerism, they will instinctively demand security from the products they consume.
  • Figure out a better way to demonstrate the value of IT Security services.
    This seems to be the Achilles heel of the IT Security world. How do you demonstrate the value of preventative counter measures? Yes, I know, another question VS. an answer.
  • Offer better security solutions and products.
    As stated in Jeremiah’s article, “Security vendors love strongly enforced compliance standards as it frees up budget for their solutions, which may not reduce risk, but have to be purchased to satisfy a checkbox”. We don’t need more checkbox solutions, we need tools that actually empower companies with the right information so that they can easily get a snap shot of the current security posture. White Hat Security has a great tool/service hybrid where vulnerability data collected during automated assessment is pre-vetted by WhiteHatSec security engineers before being presented to the customer. As a quick disclaimer, I don’t work for WhiteHatSec, but have had the opportunity to see their product in action.
  • Greater focus on outreach and communications.
    As the final, and perhaps most important solution, I propose a greater focus on outreach and communication. Security is still a field where only those who have the history and passion for computers truely understand what’s going on. This needs to change. The average web consumer must be educated to understand the personal ramifications of the “laiser faire” attitude that plagues the web application security world.

Please feel free to share you thoughts in the comments, I’m very interested to hear what my peers have to say on this subject.