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Posts Tagged ‘Anti-Malware’

Lots of FREE full version security solutions coming to our social network for our National IT Security Public Awareness Program “NITSPAP” in October.

September 28th, 2009 Brett A. Scudder No comments

Greetings my fellow readers,

This is an early heads up for you my valuable blogs readers that we will be giving away a lot of great full version security solutions for FREE as a part of our contribution towards helping to provide more education, awareness and security for our online users. I value your support in reading my blogs and sending me your feedback and support so here’s a little something back from me to you.

There will be anti-virus suites, anti-malware suites and other detection, prevention and mitigation solutions from the vendors in our network. You must be an active member of our social network to win so join up now and get ready for some good stuff. All are invited so join us if you are not yet a member of the best new social network around.

http://titssn.org/signup.php

The giveaway details will be provided shortly as I work on purchasing the solutions to have enough to distribute.

Thank you and have a great day,

~Brett A. Scudder~

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IT Security Education and Awareness 04-09 #1 – IT Security is a people problem, not an industry one

April 6th, 2009 Brett A. Scudder No comments

Good day to you,

 

Every day I talk with people across all vertical markets, business sizes, organizations and cultures about the IT Security issues being faced in our world today and how it impacts our everyday lives, and it is becoming one of those awakening kind of issues for many. Whether they like it or not, they know they are affected in one way or another. While most people tend to try and figure out if and where they fit into this Matrix, the recent mass media explosion of the Conficker worm created somewhat of a sense of understanding as many now saw it from a non technical aspect and as what it really is, a people problem.

 

As a security attaché, I have relayed this message of IT Security being a people problem and not an industry one for years but it doesn’t resonate well for many because they didn’t understand the matrix and how it worked. Now that they saw and heard of it on the TV (which is an even bigger influencer on people today), the same things we IT people have been trying to tell them now makes some kind of sense. Let us take away the fact that whether the media coverage on the TV was doing much justice or help for the issue(s), it did add a well needed visibility to the scope of the problem and that was very well needed today. It would be nice if we say a segment on the news specific to The IT Security Threats Landscape ~TITSTL~ and issues in and around it. They could bring in some professionals in the field to talk about the issues and what is going on and how people can protect themselves in it. That would be a well needed thing to see at that level today as we are going into this vast technology future of ours which we’re taking head on without looking at the real implications and effects of it.

 

The logic behind the issue is simple, because your system(s) are up and running and have not been wiped out nor shut down by a threat doesn’t mean it is safe, secure or threat free. In many of my health assessments I have shown the owner my findings of worms, trojans and other blended threats that are sitting on their systems because of lack of proper security solutions to protect them or the improper configuration of the solution being used. The fact that they are there is one thing, what they are doing is something else and both are critical issues to ponder.

 

While many will refute this fact, I have seen, worked and handled enough of these cases to state as a fact that many fall into this area of The IT Security Threats Landscape. A resident rootkit, keylogger, worm or whatever the variant may be, is actively working its way through your system and causing some form of data loss/theft or compromising the state of applications, connectivity or system stability that we security professionals deem critical. Here is another way to look at this.

 

If you went to the doctor for a cough that has been bugging you for a while and he says to you, you have a chest or respiratory infection would you tell him no?

If he says to you that you need antibiotics and some cold medicine do you tell him no?

Why not?

Because, this is his field of expertise and study and as such he can make this assessment based on his knowledge of the issue and the facts he has from testing you.

Are you a medical person to dispute his statement and will you seek a second opinion from someone else?

 

The fact that you’re still alive and well (somewhat, depending on how you define well) does not negate the reality of the issue that you are infected with something that is causing some kind of issue/effect on the body resulting in that cough which in our field of IT we would call an early warning. So, this is the same way in which we look at the IT Security issues of today and how people tend not to look at it. They haven’t gotten that early warning of a cough because the system hasn’t picked up on it yet and when it does happen, because they have not fallen and can’t get up this is not a critical issue. The system becoming slow and unresponsive is that early warning and at that stage most people tend to seek professional help depending on the need/use of the system and how critical it may be for business or even personal use.

 

So here we stand dealing with people who are harvesters of thousands of people’s information and things about them (whether you know or like it) and they rest idle to this decadent behavior and mindset. Yet, unchecked, their systems sit comfortably hosting these blended threats which are sending/stealing critical private, personal, financial data/information to these hackers unbeknownst to them. The careless whisper of ignorance to these issues is the driving force behind the growing success of such threats today. A hacker have so much more to gain from you giving it to them than for them having to go through getting it from you and is why the botnet issue is such a growing one today. The use of keygens, crack files, peer to peer (P2P), unpatched applications and systems makes it so much easier to exploit what is available that one tends to wonder when and where does it end. It ends with user education and awareness on and about the threats landscape and what these issues are. It end when people start taking this seriously and realizes that you’re just as much a victim as anyone anywhere if you’re not protected properly.

 

It ends when you stop saying I have anti-virus protection and so i’m ok when you know you haven’ renewed that subscription over six months ago and so you’re missing all the latest and greatest signature based protection that it should provide. Anti-virus alone CANNOT protect you from the threats out there today, it has to be a layered approach where various solutions are in play to cover the needed layers.

It ends when you wake up from this illusion that my OS is more secure than the other and so I don’t have to worry about these security issues.

It ends when we stop underestimating the knowledge of your youths and start educating them much early on the proper use of the internet and the functions and features of it. IT Security must be a part of the school curriculum today as technology is our future for tomorrow and they are our next generation of professionals and leaders.

It ends when you start accepting the fact that you are as much a risk to me as I am to you if we’re not practicing basic IT Security best practices.

It ends when you stop taking the cheap way out of operating a business when hosting people’s private and confidential information which is priceless to them and they trust you to keep it secure. Have some respect for your customers and let them rest comfortable knowing that you have their best interests at heart in properly protecting your infrastructure.

It ends when you realize that these threats are released in the wild with no specific targets but the system(s) you’re using which unfortunately is in the homes, schools, workplaces and places of general interest.

 

The treats are not specific to government and their systems. It is not specific to the private or public sectors. It is not specific to the educational institutions and it certainly isn’t targeting the healthcare sector only. All are affected and are in the path of these threats because, they are all sharing the same interconnectivity transport medium, the internet and the internet respects no one and has no boundaries.

 

It is time that people take this as a basic part of their lives where one does not get consumed on questioning the validity or severity of the threat but questioning the readiness of themselves and their systems to face them. While our government may understand the real scope of these issues, their efforts to create effective management and policies to protect the country’s infrastructure are missing critical elements, the people and the roles they play in strengthening the protective layers or being a weak link and point of entry/compromise for what is being implemented. Unless we strengthen the people through education and awareness they will always be a weak link in the chain of protection.

 

When a company is hacked or they lose their data by whatever means there is, who suffers the most, the employees, the end users. The company suffers a data loss or has a breach but the actual data may be your private and confidential information. Even if the company loses its financial data, it has a much better recovery rate through insurance and such than an individual who now suffers from the loss of privacy and here in the US, credit ratings.

 

Think about the many places that have information about you that you consider to be private and confidential. Your employer has your social security info (and possibly family members who are covered by you), some financial info for direct depositing of your paychecks. Your 401K info. Health and life insurance info.

Your doctor has your private health records and, results. They have your family’s private info as well as some kind of visit may have been had over the years and that info is in the system.

Your bank has all your financial info and records. They may have your mortgage info as well (if you own a home). The car loan and all the info in it. Student loans and the works.

 

So think on these things and when you look at all of them, who is most affected in the event of a data loss or breach at any one of those kinds of organizations or businesses, you, the end user, consumer, employee.

 

IT Security is a people problem and must be dealt with accordingly. It is not about selling security, it’s about creating greater education and awareness about it so we can all contribute towards upholding the strengths of the protective security layers that are there for our protection.

 

Stop asking if this is real, ask yourself, how do I protect myself, my family, my business, my country from these elements and there effects. This is REAL.

 

When in doubt, reach out.

 

~Brett A. Scudder~

The IT Security Attaché

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The Conficker Worm – my review

March 29th, 2009 Brett A. Scudder 5 comments

The Conficker Worm – my review

 

There have been many articles, reviews, information and posting about the Conf*ker as many people have started calling it. Depending on who you talk with you can replace the * with anything that suits your feelings towards it. The most interesting thing about this threat isn’t the fact that it’s neither a new one nor a new attack form, it’s the same old attackers doing the nefarious things they do but with a bit more sophistication. For me as an IT guy looking at all this, i’m getting the wow factor from some of the new developments and traits of the threat. So my take today will not be to overwhelm you with all the techno jargon and high level breakdown of the threat but just to speak on it in the most basic form so that even those who are non technical can grasp the severity of it.

 

So here goes.

 

If you get infected with the Conficker worm you’re screwed. Bottom line.

 

If this is a system that is on a business network it must be removed, quarantined, disinfected by any means necessary. Take no chances with this threat.

Get my drift?

Is this basic enough to understand?

 

Ok, let’s take it from another angle.

 

This worm is a blended (virus, worm, rootkit, botnet, adware, malware and the what else factor) threat in a blended threat with blended characteristics. It’s like catching a cold and getting a headache, ear ache, stomach ache, backache and chest pains all in one. It starts with a simple cold but quickly spreads to other critical areas of the body causing serious effects and harm. This threat is in a class by itself as it deploys various additional agents around the system that causes complete successful removal to be unclear.

 

If you have been infected with the worm you’re only real option is to completely wipe the system. Unplug, power down, power drain, complete power loss to all storage capacities of the system. This is a very serious threat.

 

As for those who have been asking about which anti-virus solution is best to protect against this, there isn’t one. Anti-Virus alone is not going to protect you from this threat and the blended effects. It will take a number of things to make this happen and here’s my list.

 

1.      System must be fully patched from all angles, the operating system, the applications, services, devices and drivers. When patching the Microsoft Windows operating system many people have auto update enabled but in different settings. Some have alert me of new updates but never apply the new updates. Some have it set to download and wait for my approval and they never approve the installation of the updates. Some have it set to download and install all updates. This is a good option to have. When patching the OS one must be prudent so as not to only apply critical patches but all software, severe and high updates as well. So I recommend if you’re doing the built in auto update please use the download and apply all. If doing it manually do a custom update which will reveal all the patches and updates needed.

2.      Anti-Virus alone will not protect you from this worm and most of the new threats in the IT Security Threats Landscape today and tomorrow. The need for an anti-malware solution is critical to combine the protective layers of web/content filtering, IDS/IPS, anomaly/heuristics based detection, network and proactive threat protections. This is a backup to the patching already performed on the system. A fully patched system can still be compromised if a targeted malicious code is allowed to reach it.

3.      Common sense if the name of the game and the winner of all security practices. Adding to the patching of the system and having the needed security solution comes the best practice of all, the user’s common sense in using the system effectively. As the person using the system one needs to pay very close attention to details in their messaging, web browsing and IM practices. Opening emails from known and unknown sources requires due diligence in thinking about the nature of the message, the contents and what is its relevance to you. A message from a known source may not have been sent by them but could have been the result of an infection on their system(s). This is the same for email and IMs. There are many IM worms that will hijack your IM client and send out messages to everyone in your contact list pointing them to a website for them to get a drive-by-download. Many people think very little of web based attacks while they are the fastest growing today because of the ease of infection and the delivery of the payload.

4.      User education and awareness. This is a very critical issue as many seem to think that these issues are a corporate or industry problem. When a threat like Conficker goes into the wild it is not targeting specific systems in specific industries only, it is doing a general attack across all systems within its path. IT Security is a people problem and we are all in its path whether we like it or not and no matter what OS vendor platform you’re on/running.

5.      Enable your built in firewall or get a third party one to put up some form of perimeter defenses.

6.      There are security suite solutions that bundles multiple security technologies and features in one suite. That may be a more viable option for you because of the integration and management options.

 

The fact of the matter is, we have these issues at the level they should have been years ago, in the media and across all industries as a people problem, not an industry one. I take the same approach to Conficker as I do to rogue Anti-Virus 2008/9 threat, if detected, wipe, clean, rebuild, reimage.

 

This isn’t something to play around with what is or if it is cleaned. The only way to be sure is to wipe it all out.

 

Thank you and have a great day,

 

~Brett A. Scudder~

The IT Security Attaché

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TITSSN’s ENGAGED ~ENabling Greater Awareness, Growth and Educational Development~

March 24th, 2009 Brett A. Scudder 2 comments

TITSSN has always been a network of, for and about the community and we have always tried to find ways of working within it to make it the most valuable and successful experience ever for our members. In working with our communities in and outside of IT, we have found similar issues that reflected upon the need for creating a more resourceful and aggregated system that would put people, processes and things together, making it a more seamless integration for all. Our education and awareness training and development initiatives built on these findings so that we would address the issues on a more personal level as a team. The extensive experience and qualifications of the network members in their areas of business provides invaluable impact on what we see, hear, say and how we react to them.

 

It is for this reason that we are enacting a new initiative to aggregate all these issues, programs and initiatives under one umbrella that I believe will fix these problems, ENGAGED. ENGAGED, ENabling Greater Awareness, Growth and Educational Development, is an initiative that will take our education, awareness, training and development initiatives to a whole new level. Through ENGAGED we’re working with businesses, schools, libraries, churches and other institutions to deliver the needed resources for addressing the IT Security Threats Landscape of today for tomorrow.

 

As a network of technical professionals, consultants, specialists, VARs and business executives, the ENGAGED initiative will add the much needed collaboration between the organization members. One such enhancement will be a bi-weekly Live Meetings via Microsoft’s Live Meeting service to help with the adoption, training and development of its members on new and existing products and solutions in the security space. This will add the needed value of increased training on specialized products and services provided by the network. Our integration of working with the vendors directly will allow the additional benefit of having their high level technical people in the session to help with the understanding of the products and any problems and support we may need. TITSSN believes that it is through the proper training, understanding and knowledge of these products that we will be successful in supporting, deploying and managing them, and so we’re adding more value through the use of live meetings.

 

On Monday April 20th, TITSSN will enhance the ENGAGED initiative by starting an IT Security Training and Development course for the youths in our local schools through their local office in Arverne NY. This course will be geared towards working with the youths of today who are growing up to be our professionals of tomorrow to give them a better look and feel of the space and what to expect from it. We are working with the local schools in the community to select a number of students who will participate in this course and get the needed exposure to today’s IT Security Threats Landscape ~ITSTL~ and how they can be valuable resources in making it better for tomorrow. This training course will not be the end all, be all for them as we plan on helping them throughout their professional development as mentors in the space. The initiative does not want them learning and forgetting and so future involvement on different levels will follow after the course is completed. Certifications will be awarded to each student that completes the course and passes a final hands-on test.

 

The training and development course will introduce them to the world of IT Security and all the factors that are in and around it. They will have hands-on access to the latest and greatest security hardware and software products ranging from Biometrics, IDS/IPS, UTM “Unified Threat Management” devices, anti-virus, anti-malware, firewalls and general IT products that are available today across the various operating system environments. This is an extension of our Secure Minds Initiative where we are trying to get the integration of IT Security into the school’s curriculum to enhance the preparedness of this needed area of specialty for the future. We need the realization of IT Security as a people problem to be one that resonates across all borders and cultures. We are on the brink of a global network catastrophe if this realization is not understood.

 

Through ENGAGED, we have negotiated special vendor pricing and offers to help get the needed security products and solutions out to the general public. As this have been a major issue for many, we are always working on ways in which to bring the networks power to use in negotiating special programs, offerings and incentives from the vendors for our initiatives. A part of our Secure Minds Initiative is to provide security products and solutions to the schools and this will help to make that more readily available through special programs we are hosting there. We are reaching out to our local government resources to funds this initiative through grants and other financial resources in an effort to minimize the costs and offer the products freely when and where we can.

 

To the business community, ENGAGED provides the needed sales, support and training and development to better prepare you, your company and employees to deal with the issues of the IT Security Threats Landscape. Leveraging our network and resources will be beneficial for you as we provide in-house training and development workshops to further build on this. As your local technology/security professionals, you can reach out to the network to find a resource in your area that can and will work with you. We have customized solutions that will work for you and your company no matter the size or location, if we’re needed, we’ll make it there.

 

With so many resources now being forced online even from the government levels, using the internet and its resource is now a mandatory issues as local offices and resources are being cut as this new online presence becomes more useful. That being said, the use of the internet and its resources has increased significantly over the past year as social networking and other social media have played a key role in this new age of collaboration and networking. The future belongs to networkers and if you’re not a part of the new trend one tends to feel left out when asked if they are on a popular network like Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn.

 

The present economic crisis adds a dire need for this engagement as more people are using the internet resources for job hunting and finding new homes to live. This is just the start of a change that will never go back to what it used to be, the internet is here to stay and is more than what it used to be 2 years ago.

 

TITSSN activates the ENGAGED initiative on April 1st 2009 with a series of kick off events for the month. On April 9th at TITSSN’s monthly meeting at the Microsoft Briefing Center in NYC, president/chairman/security attaché Mr. Brett A. Scudder will officially present the initiative to the organization and outlining a few additional aspects of it and how it will be executed. He will also cover the members ENGAGED aspects as well. Registration is open and available here http://www.clicktoattend.com/?id=137146.

 

On Monday April 13th from 3-5pm, TITSSN will host a local reception at our office at 331 Beach 70th St, Arverne, NY, 11692 to highlight some of the technologies that will be a part of the initiative. This is a RSVP/registration event. Interested persons are asked to register here http://www.clicktoattend.com/?id=137140.

 

The first ENGAGED members Live Meeting session will be on Wednesday April 22nd from 7-9pm and the info will be sent to active members.

 

As food and refreshments will be provided at our local meetings and events and we need to ensure that we have enough to cover our guests so registration for these events is a must.

 

Thank you very much and have a great day.

 

TITSSN ~The IT Security Suite Network~

We are Security – your Security – our Security – IT Security. Our Security is Safe and Secure.

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