Palo Alto Networks News of the Week – November 1

Here’s all of the Palo Alto Networks news from the past week.

Once in a while, you come across a story that grabs your attention and makes you wonder how it would apply to your own situation. Last year, one such story was the film ‘Her.’ It portrayed an everyday person falling in love with an everyday technology called OS1 and its voice Samantha. The analogy? We meet customers every day who tell us that they’ve fallen in love with our platform. So in honor of our customers, meet PAN-OS

Unit 42 examines an information stealer campaign that leveraged a VBA macro script and focuses on its progression, from delivery to Command and Control (C2), and its attribution to a malicious actor for context on objectives and motivation.

Because many businesses are aggressively pursuing Internet of Things (IoT) initiatives with the goal of creating revenue-generating opportunities, Isabelle Dumont touches on the importance of protecting critical infrastructure, properly securing all devices that are connected to the Internet, and how best to approach security of IoT.

Check out Rick Howard’s interview with ISMG’s Tom Field on “How to Put Survey Results to Work,” where he talks candidly about his gut reaction to the recent Advanced Persistent Threats Survey results, the latest APT tactics and solutions, and how organizations should approach 2015 security investments.

We’re on the road with VMware and VMUG in the U.S. and Canada to discuss how you can strengthen your data center security without compromising application performance. Find an event near you to learn best practices for implementing advanced security services in a SDDC, to hear customer insights for deploying VMware NSX with micro-segmentation, and to get hands-on experience test-driving an integrated VMware-Palo Alto Networks solution.

PAN-DB is our URL and IP database, designed to fulfill an enterprise’s web security needs. PAN-DB is tightly integrated into PAN-OS, providing you Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) protection with high-performance beyond traditional URL filtering. Here are a few web security tips from Tsugunori Sugawara on how PAN-DB works.

 

Read about how RWE selected Palo Alto Networks to guard high-stakes financial and energy data from endpoint exploits in this month’s Customer Spotlight.

 

We’re on the road across North and South America with Citrix and CA for the next few weeks, talking about how enterprises can streamline virtualized data centers, radically simplify network services for delivering critical applications and reduce complexity and cost – all without sacrificing performance and security. Join us at an event near you.

 

Here are upcoming events around the world that you should know about:

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Anaheim, CA

  • When: November 4, 2014 11:00 AM – 1:30 PM PST
  • Where: Anaheim, CA

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Denver, CO

  • When: November 4, 2014 11:00 AM – 2:30 PM MST
  • Where: Denver, CO

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Edmonton, AB

  • When: November 4, 2014 11:00 AM – 2:30 PM MST
  • Where: Edmonton, AB

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Seattle, WA

  • When: November 4, 2014 11:00 AM – 1:30 PM PST
  • Where: Seattle, WA

Palo Alto Networks & Westcon Security Seminar [Italian]

  • When: November 4, 2014 10:00 AM – 2:30 PM CET
  • Where: Roma

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Calgary, AB

  • When: November 5, 2014 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM MST
  • Where: Calgary, AB

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Dallas, TX

  • When: November 5, 2014 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM CST
  • Where: Dallas, TX

Opplev styrken i Next-Generation Brannmurer [Norwegian]

  • When: November 5, 2014 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM MEZ
  • Where: Online

Palo Alto Networks: Live Demo

  • When: November 5, 2014 9:00 AM – 10:00 AM PST
  • Where: Online Event

Advanced Endpoint Protection with Palo Alto Networks

  • When: November 6, 2014 1:30 PM – 2:30 PM PST
  • Where: Online

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Cleveland, OH

  • When: November 6, 2014 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM EST
  • Where: Independence, OH

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Portland, OR

  • When: November 6, 2014 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM PST
  • Where: Portland, OR

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Scottsdale, AZ

  • When: November 6, 2014 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM MST
  • Where: Scottsdale, AZ

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Vancouver, BC

  • When: November 6, 2014 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM PST
  • Where: Vancouver, BC

Safe Application Enablement with Palo Alto Networks

  • When: November 6, 2014 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM PST
  • Where: Online

11月7日(金)製品体感セミナー [Japanese]

  • When: November 7, 2014 1:30 PM – 5:00 PM GMT+9:00
  • Where: 千代田区

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Chicago, IL

  • When: November 11, 2014 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM CST
  • Where: Rosemont, IL

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Nashville, TN

  • When: November 11, 2014 2:30 PM – 5:00 PM CST
  • Where: Nashville, TN

You Can Have It All

  • When: November 11, 2014 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM CST
  • Where: New Orleans, LA

11月12日(水)製品導入・運用支援トレーニング [Japanese]

  • When: November 12, 2014 1:30 PM – 5:00 PM GMT+9:00
  • Where: 千代田区

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Salt Lake City, UT

  • When: November 12, 2014 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM MST
  • Where: Salt Lake City, UT

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Santiago, Chile

  • When: November 12, 2014 12:00 PM – 2:00 PM GMT-4:00
  • Where: Las Condes Región Metropolitana

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Toronto, ON

  • When: November 12, 2014 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM EST
  • Where: Toronto, ON

Palo Alto Networks: Live Demo

  • When: November 12, 2014 9:00 AM – 10:00 AM PST
  • Where: Online

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Buenos Aires, Argentina

  • When: November 13, 2014 12:00 PM – 3:00 PM GMT-3:00
  • Where: Buenos Aires

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Los Angeles, CA

  • When: November 13, 2014 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM PST
  • Where: Los Angeles, CA

Datacenter Consolidation Seminar Series – Montreal, QC

  • When: November 13, 2014 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM EST
  • Where: Montreal, QC

Er du forberedt til å håndtere ukjente trussler i ditt nettverk? [Norwegian]

  • When: November 13, 2014 1:00 PM – 1:30 PM CET
  • Where: Online

11月14日(金)製品実感トレーニング [Japanese]

  • When: November 14, 2014 1:30 PM – 5:00 PM GMT+9:00
  • Where: 千代田区

[Palo Alto Networks Blog]

(ISC)² Application Security Advisory Council Releases Set of Tips for More Secure Software

To celebrate the 11th annual National Cyber Security Awareness Month (NCSAM), (ISC)² has released its fifth and final set of tips by its Application Security Advisory Council: tips for more secure software.

“Make sure your business functionality maps to a security plan (i.e., security is built-in, not bolted-on).

Design your software with the future in mind, not just of the now (i.e., it is adaptable to talent-, technological- and threat- changes).

Don’t develop your software if your modus operandi is, ‘You start coding, I will go find out what they want.’ This is not agile programming.”
-Mano Paul, CISSP, CSSLP, GWAPT, GSSP-.Net, MCAD, MCSD, CompTIA Network+, ECSA, Founder & CEO, SecuRisk Solutions and Express Certifications; Founder, HackFormers

“Always question what data you should trust. Where does your application really start and end?

Study your configurations to ensure you’re not leaving your software open to being hacked.

Understand the protections that are naturally within your platform, and USE them.”
-Glenn Leifheit, CISSP, CSSLP, Principal Security Architect, Microsoft

“Look into the CSSLP!  Secure software involves more than just writing code.  Test, Test, and Test your code some more!

Think ‘Dysfunctionally’. ‘Dysfunctional Testing’ involves not just testing your software for how it should work, yet also how it should not work. Test abuse cases.

If you don’t test your software for security vulnerabilities, others will on your behalf in the field. Vulnerability test your product before it is released.

Fuzz, fuzz, and fuzz test your protocols some more.

DevOps is an important component of helping to make secure software.

Everyone has a role in helping make software secure. Secure software requires executive support, program management, product management,  marketing, incident response teams, testers, developers, and release teams. We must work together to make secure software.”
-Tony Vargas, CISSP-ISSAP, CSSLP, Security+, Co-Founder, Chairman & President, (ISC)2 Sacramento Chapter; Chair, (ISC)2 Application Security Advisory Council

“If you’re developing software, the OWASP Cheat Sheets [authored in part by ASAC member Tom Brennan] should be helpful: https://www.owasp.org/index.php/OWASP_Cheat_Sheet_Series
-Tom Brennan, CISSP, Global Vice Chairman, OWASP Foundation; Founder, proactiveRISK and CyberTOOLBELT

[(ISC)2]

Financial Breaches Show ‘Trust Model’ Is Broken

It’s a full-blown crisis when a dozen major financial services firms admit to having their networks probed by the same attackers as those behind the JPMorgan Chase breach.

The one thing the seemingly never-ending string of security breaches highlights is the fact that the current online trust model as we know it is broken. The security compromises at JPMorgan Chase, Home Depot, Dairy Queen, and elsewhere are proof that it is time for industry stakeholders to go back to the drawing board. Clearly, the old model of throwing resources at perimeter defenses, sticking in a few intrusion and anomaly detection tools, patching, and praying is not working.

It’s bad enough when major retailers like Home Depot get compromised. It’s much worse when JPMorgan Chase, the nation’s largest bank, says intruders were able to break into its systems and steal data on a staggering 83 million consumer and commercial accounts. Having served as the Chief Information Security Officer at Fifth Third Bank and Bank One, respectively in Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio, I can speak from personal experience. It’s a full-blown crisis when more than a dozen major financial services companies admit to having their networks being probed for weaknesses by the same attackers as those behind the Chase breach. This reflects the increasing technical sophistication and the audacity of those behind these attacks.

It’s not just banking and the retail industry that are vulnerable. Other sectors, some of them in critical infrastructure industries such as electric sector companies, are also dangerously exposed to similar threats from motivated, highly skilled adversaries. If the recently disclosed breaches are any indication, many of them are likely already compromised and don’t know it.

While it’s easy to blame the victims for their predicament, the problems go much deeper. It is hard to believe that an organization like JPMorgan Chase simply allowed intruders to waltz into its systems and walk away with all those credentials. According to Jamie Dimon, the company’s chief executive officer, JPMorgan Chase spends $250 million annually on computer security. Over the next five years, the bank plans on doubling that amount to minimize the risk of same thing happening again.

A lucky break for hackers?
That intruders were able to break through even the defenses that this kind of money can buy only proves the old adage: The bad guys only need to get lucky once. As Dimon noted in remarks at a financial service event in Washington recently, defending enterprises is also about internal protection, vendor protection, and about securing against everything that touches the enterprise network. “There will be a lot of battles,” he said. “Unfortunately some will be lost.”

Retailers, for instance, are frequent targets because magnetic stripe credit and debit cards used in the US are so easy to compromise. Migrating the payment system to smartcards based on the Europay MasterCard Visa (EMV) standard will make it much harder for criminals to clone and use stolen card data, thereby making it more difficult for hackers to take advantage of retailers.

Breaches like the one at Dairy Queen spotlight the need for all enterprises to pay attention to third-party service providers and the entire supply chain. Dairy Queen says attackers used login credentials belonging to a third-party vendor to access its networks and steal cardholder data belonging to customers across 400 store locations. DQ is not the first company to be victimized by a lapse at a third-party, and it won’t be the last.

At the end of the day, despite the wealth of technologies in a computer network, someone is still going to find a way to get in if they are determined and patient enough. The focus has to be not only on detection, response, and mitigation, but also on prevention. It needs to about reducing the overall risk profile.

It takes a village
Security vendors, hardware manufacturers, and cloud service providers need to be willing to work together to address the vulnerabilities that allow breaches to happen so often. Threat information sharing is a vital component of this partnership. One of the reasons perpetrators of the JPMorgan attack probed other financial services companies was because they figured their best chance of getting in would be before the banks started alerting each other about unusual activity. Better information sharing among enterprises, vendors, and other stakeholders should help deter such behavior.

Similarly, technologies such as one-time-use credit card numbers that change randomly with each transaction could make it more difficult for criminals to steal from retailers. Even simple measures like giving consumers the ability to specify spending limits over a particular time period could reduce fraudulent use of stolen cards.

There are no silver bullets, but if protection could extend across the entire supply chain, enterprises and the consumers they serve would be better protected. For instance, make it easier for enterprises to discover and secure applications based on employee use and business criticality. Tools such as strong encryption, key management, tokenization, and data loss prevention can help companies protect data in the cloud more efficiently.

Getting security right in this environment of non-stop breaches presents a huge opportunity for cloud and security providers to innovate. Addressing security comprehensively across private sector companies can create an environment that is resilient and transparent, and will allow us to prosper over the long term.

Bob West has more than a decade in security leadership roles with financial and professional services organizations where he oversaw security strategy and audit-and-compliance across global teams. He has held Chief Information Security Officer roles at Fifth Third Bank and Bank One, led Ernst & Young’s security practice, and was a Senior Systems Officer with Citicorp. He most recently served as founder and CEO of Echelon One, a fast-growing risk consulting firm. Bob has served on the advisory boards of Securent (acquired by Cisco) and TriCipher (acquired by VMWare), and as a member of RSA Security’s Customer Advisory Council and the ISS Customer Advisory Council. He was also a member of the IT Sector Coordinating Council and of the International Cybercrime Subcommittee.

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