Showing posts with label predictions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label predictions. Show all posts

Monday, January 31, 2011

My Security Predictions for 2011

Now that I have checked my  2010 predictions (see here) and “reflected and mused” on 2010 (here), I am allowed to proceed to 2011 predictions  Smile

My past experience predicting shows that I am a cowardly, extrapolating predictor – and can get a lot of easy, obvious stuff right. Great!  I will do some of it  now as well since  there is nothing wrong with extrapolation and “Feynman prediction methodology” [=predicting that whatever is there now will stay the same in the future]), but will try to be a bit more wild, like I was in my 2020 (!) security predictions. Also, I noticed I’ve been a bit too verbose in the past, so this year I ‘d rather be brief (since I am busier).

So:

  • PCI DSS 2.0 marches on: this is the year when PCI DSS gets even BIGGER (if you can  imagine it!). And smaller too – more smaller business will “get” PCI. Great news! On the not so good side of PCI, I predict that  a few of “validated compliant” companies will be found abysmally non-compliant and insecure: after the breach or otherwise. Maybe some QSA heads will roll as a result, especially those “remote-assessing” “easy-graders.” The challenges of compliance in non-traditional environments (virtual, cloud, mobile devices, non-traditional payment methods, etc) will rise to prominence as well.
  • HIPAA teeth: yes, this is one of those things that people has been predicting since 1996 (yes, really!), but somehow I feel like this time – in 2011 – HIPAA/HITECH enforcement will be for real.  OK…you can call me an idiot in a year, if I am wrong here.
  • Application security – and application security monitoringGunnar paradox on firewalls+SSL might finally start to break in 2011. I do predict that not just web application security, but also many internal “enterprise” application will get in scope for SIEM, correlation, near-real-time monitoring, etc. And not just at “adventurous” security leader companies, but more like in early mainstream.
  • Still no mobile malware deluge: enough about this one. Enough! Enough!! For sure, there will be isolated (and possibly pretty bad) malware incidents, but not “Slammer for iPhone” or “Blaster for Android” in 2011.  I suspect that PCs will still have more “money” and more holes and so this is what the bad guys will continue to steal.
  • Mainstream security in the cloud: yes, Qualys and a few others have been doing it since 1999 and a few cloud security providers has been absorbed into large entities (latest, sort of), but I suspect that in 2011 we will see much more of “<XYZ> approach to security of <ABC>… now in the cloud.” BTW, I mean REALLY using SaaS/PaaS/IaaS cloud options and not “press-release cloud” like many do today.
  • “New” types of incidents: going on limb, I predict a few large  (and very damaging) breaches, NOT involving regulated PII, but good old secrets. Wikileaks mentality + cybercrime resources = a fun year!
  • SIEM for dummies: OK, this is another risky one. As you know, there is no leader in the SMB/SME SIEM market and I am really looking for somebody to climb on that hill. The world needs a penultimate “SIEM for dummies.” As of today, SIEM is decidedly not.  At the very least….I am predicting the arrival of “a log toaster” Smile
  • Security vendors: despite the silly 2007 predictions by RSA CEO, there will still be hundreds of security companies around. However, some of the players will definitely feel like they”overstayed market’s welcome” (e.g. some legacy SIEM vendors) and will either die or go firesale.
  • Risk “management”:  every past year, I predicted that we will remain dazed and confused about how to apply risk to information security in an objective manner (objective, not necessarily quantitative). This year…. drumroll… I am laying these dark thoughts to rest – at least for a while. Maybe, just maybe, we are starting to see both data and approaches that will eventually give us something to work with. And not just whine about it Smile

Enjoy!

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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Checking My 2010 Security Predictions

People should be banned from making new industry predictions before checking how their past predictions fared – and possibly embarrassing themselves again and again (see “The Year of Mobile Malware” Smile)
My 2010 predictions were here: http://chuvakin.blogspot.com/2009/12/security-predictions-2010.html
Proceeding to check them below!
#1
Compliance: as many other observers (Joshua at 451 Group comes to mind) noted, many of the security activities in 2010 will be defined by regulatory mandates such as PCI DSS, HIPAA/HITECH and others.  […]
Sadly, this is as true as ever. As security moves downstream/downmarket, compliance plays bigger role. WIN – but an easy one. BTW, some people did predict “the death of compliance”, but this sure isn't happening any time soon…
#2
Bad shit: what we have here is an intersection of two opposite trends: rampant, professional cybercrime and low occurrence of card fraud (as a percentage of card transaction volume). I explain this conundrum by predicting a scary picture of huge criminal opportunity, which still exists unchanged.  […]
Shit is indeed pretty bad. WIN – but an easy one; no fame points getting this right. This will get worse before they get better and we are in the “climb to REALLY bad shit phase”, IMHO.
#3


Intrusion tolerance is another trend (and its continues existence is in fact my prediction for 2010) which helps the “bad guys”: it is highly likely that most organizations have bots on their networks. What are they doing about it? Nothing much that actually helps. It is too hard; and many businesses just aren’t equipped – both skill-wise and technology wise – to combat a well-managed criminal operation which also happens to not be very disruptive to the operation of their own business.  […]
Same thing – predicting this was like taking candy from a baby. WIN, but with no extra credit. Organization will likely stay owned, despite regulations, media attentions, big security budgets, etc.
#4
Cloud security: I predict much more noise and a bit more clarity (due to CSA work) in regards to information security requirements as more and more IT migrates to the cloud. The Holy Grail of “cloud security” – a credible cloud provider assessment guide/checklist – will emerge during 2010.
A WIN here too - more clarity on cloud security is here. CSA work (CSA 2.0 guide,  recent cloud compliance matrix and CloudAudit releases) are helping.  Still, there is a lot of delusional cloud noises from many vendors….
#5

Platform security: just like Vista didn’t in 2007, Windows 7 won’t “make us secure.” The volume of W7 hacking  will increase as the year progresses.  Also, in 2008, I predicted an increase in Mac hacking. I’d like to repeat it as there is still room there :-) […]
And, only the truly lazy won’t predict more web application attacks. Of course! It is a true no-brainer, if there ever were one. Web application hacking is “a remote network service overflow” of the 2000s….
So, a partial WIN here, but then again – predicting “more attacks” is stupidly easy. BTW, Windows 7 is holding pretty well and there is no dramatic rise in public W7 vuln releases. Are people hoarding them (possible) or the vulnerabilities just aren’t there? Or maybe everybody is owning Adobe now (NEWFLASH: Adobe 2 days without a 0-day vulnerability!)


#6

Incidents: just like in 2008, I predict no major utility/SCADA intrusion and thus no true “cyber-terrorism” (not yet). Everybody predicts this one forever (as Rich mentions), but I am guessing we would need to wait at least few years for this one (see my upcoming predictions for 2020!) Sure, it makes for interesting thinking about why it did not happen; surely there is a massive fun factor in sending some sewage towards your enemies.  I'm happy to be correct here and have no such incidents happen, but I was predicting that something major and world changing would NOT happen so Feynman paradox is on my side. […]
WIN – but a reluctant one. I still won’t predict it for 2011 (predictions out soon), but even thinking about this one freaks me out…

UPDATED: in comments, Alex has [likely] correctly called me on this one - what about Stuxnet and Iran's nuclear control gear? Won't this qualify as "major industrial control incident"? OK, maybe - but we don't know what damage they suffered, beyond annoyance. In any case, I am changing this for partial FAIL from WIN.

UPDATED2: this prediction is an official FAIL. It was reported that Stuxnet DID in fact significantly impact Iranian nuclear facilities by accelerating an unknown number of centrifuges to beyond safe limits, and likely causing their breakage. We have proof - sort of - that you can blow up sensitive equipment nicely using malware. So...the future begins...NOW?

A massive data theft to dwarf Heartland will probably be on the books. And it will include not some silly credit card number (really, who cares? :-)), but full identity - SSN and all.
FAIL. No such breach materialized – at least not publicly.

UPDATED3: as pointed out in comments, Wikileaks is just such a breach - big, wide-ranging; it matters even though I thought it would be a PII breach and not a confidential document breach. Changing FAIL to partial WIN.


#7

Malware: sorry guys, but this year won’t be the Year of Mobile Malware either. As I discussed here, mobile malware is "a good idea" (for attackers) provided there is something valuable to steal – but it is just not the case yet in the US. There will be more PoC malware for iPhone, BlackBerry, maybe the Droid, but there will be no rampage. On the fun side, maybe we will finally see that Facebook malware/malicious application (that I predicted and consequently missed in 2008). This one will be fun to watch (others agree), and current malware defenses will definitely not stop this "bad boy," at least not before it does damage.
WIN. Read my lips: no..year..of…mobile…malware! Yes, I know AV vendors want it badly (in their ongoing fight for relevance) and keep predicting it  but it ain’t coming. Sorry!

#8
Risk management: more confusion. Enough said. In 2008, I said “Will we know what risk management actually isin the context of IT security? No!It sounds like we know no more now.
WIN, but maybe not for long. Growing amount of security data might change it in the next few years. Maybe. For now, as Mike said it, "Risk scoring is still a load of crap"

Conclusion: I can predict, but mostly easily predictable stuff. I am an extrapolator, not a Nostradamus.
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Friday, January 01, 2010

Security Predictions 2020 (!)

How impossible is it to predict anything in the field of information security? 10 years? Into the future?  Still the purpose of this endeavor is not necessarily to “have everything right”, but to have fun in the process and to get people to think beyond the immediate tactical horizon in information security.

Let's start from the overriding trend that will define the rest of the discussion:

cyber_vs_realThat trend is that the walls between the computer world (aka the Internet, cyber-anything, online, virtual, cloud, etc) and the “real” world (aka meatspace, Earth, “outside”, “reality”, offline, etc) will break down beyond a certain interesting point, both on the perceptual level and in reality. With – duh! – huge implications to our profession and practice of information security.

What do I mean by this?

Whether perception is reality on not, studies I’ve seen (examples, more, more, more) point that most people behave differently in an online world and in the so-called “real” world. People can also point at many factual differences between online world (that happens inside the human created medium – networked devices) and the outside. I believe that this difference explains at least some of the current information security problems – on some deep level people just don’t see computer intrusions and other issues as “real enough” for them.  Even the simple fact that we have “crime” and “cybercrime,” points that this difference.

So here is the punch line: I think that in the next 10 years these two worlds will be much closer to each other, in both perception and “real” reality. HUGE implications to information security will result.

Where's the evidence? Here are all the things that I bundle in that “ultimate convergence”

  • Everything geo-related: GPS in phones, location- aware services, and even integrated Internet in cars. When you start to “google for coffee,” you straddle both worlds.
  • Augmented reality, conspicuous high-speed video uploads (in 2020) and video analytics capture the real world and ”map” it onto the online world. And as computing devices first become wearable (needed for AR), and then implantable (best for AR), the convergence between both worlds will become even more intense.
  • Everything computing embedded in objects: embedded computers in an ever-increasing percentage of the things we use in the real world; these will go a long way from the first Internet-connected refrigerator. Yes, clothes and shoes, not just sunglasses, are not far behind – and with bluetooth or whatever future incarnation, such wearable “PAN” becomes within reach. BTW, trains and planes run on computers too… And I am not even touching SCADA.
  • Everything robotics: robots, from Roomba to military hardware, is one more way for a computer realm to “act out” in reality. If you are confused about this argument, think about the following: a crashed computer will destroy only a computer and information inside. A crashed computer in a vacuum cleaning robot can potentially destroy … your carpet.  A crashed computer in a robotic high-speed cannon… you get the picture.
  • On a perceptual level, some studies have noted that younger generations (and here) do not draw the line between their Facebook friends and their real-world friends.  This is an example of the same trend, but occurring in the mighty realm of perception. If you are born and then grow up with (and on) the computer, you views of “computer world” will be different from those who still see computers as something “not really real.”
  • On top of this, advances in bio-sciences will obviously rely on computers and algorithms. I predict this would be another way for the computer realm to impact the “meatspace” and not only through the implantable computers.
  • Finally, the Ultimate Proof that such convergence has in fact taken place will be - you guessed it right! – cyber-terrorism. Smart folks today object to the concept of cyber-terrorism by [correctly!] stating that “real world” terrorism is more impactful. Today – it sure seems like it. In 10 years, when “real world”  is so much closer to the “computer world” – I am just not going to bet on it…

All of the above will make information security and computer security (as well as a dying art of network security) PAINFULLY more relevant for people’s lives. If an attacker from a remote location can crash the computer and steal your data, this is bad. If that same attacker can impact what you perceive to be your “real world,” the game changes. And change it will - probably even before 2020. What will stand between such attacker and others? That’d be you and me, my dear reader :-)

The above convergence will also be combined with these “side trends”, all with big impact to security:

  • In 2020, a lot of tasks can only be done with computers - or not at all. Now we can still buy a book in a bookstore, you can pay with a credit card when computers are down. Forget that – in 2020! Such irreplaceability of computers and Internet will make security sharply more relevant. Your business will not simply switch to an old, inefficient mode, when Internet is not an available. It will STOP.
  • To quote Alvin Toffler, there will also be a lot more information and thus a lot more computers to process it. These are added to the above mentioned embedded computing devices.  The result is not just an increased target set, but also more businesses being completely reliant on computers for their operation.
  • I also predict a much larger use of non-deterministic algorithms, such as those based on statistical methods. This will imbue the phrase “computer did it” (and we don't know why and how) with a whole new meaning…
  • Complete local and network scope convergence due to cloud computing and ubiquitous connectivity. They will be no such thing as a device asking “can I connect to the Internet?” As a result, Internet becomes a fabric of distributed applications, not client/server push/pull model we still largely have today.  Security implications? You bet! BTW, this will also kill the whole “but why did they connect that to the Internet in the first place?!” thinking.
  • As a result of the last point, the whole control over data will have to be done in a completely new way - or not at all. And if you think web hacking is fun today, just wait until 2020 :-) 

So, I don’t know what features your log management system will have in 2020 or what the label “firewall” will mean in 2020, but I know is that it'll matter much, much more than now. Despite all the harping about information being “critical for business”, we only protect information today.  Sorry for a bit of grandstanding here, but we will literally protect the world in 2020…

Enjoy!

BTW, other fun views of the year 2020 technology are here (created in 1994), here (created in 2005), here and in many other places.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Security Predictions 2010

First, if you want to impress friends with your future-seeing powers, just do what Richard Feynman did when he predicted some WWII events: predict “everything will stay the same.” It is known to typically score better than any more “smarty-pants” ways of seeing the future. Granted, you’d be wrong in many cases, but other methods just make you wrong in MORE cases :-)
But how fun is that? What is the value of such passive “predicteering”, apart from winning bets? No new insight will be produced, no new thoughts, no new strategy, etc. I will not follow that approach!

In any case, let’s start from my traditional del.ici.us annual security prediction tracker: http://delicious.com/anton18/security+predictions+2010. There I log what everybody else has been predicting, from fairly insightful to downright dumb and biased. Also, right before preparing the 2010 version, I reviewed my 2008 security predictions and then I realized that I never posted the 2009 version. Shame on me!
The main theme of my 2010 predictions is “nearing the thresholds.”  These thresholds are in many dimensions: interest in information security, security awareness across organizations (mostly due to PCI DSS) as well as threshold of the offensive side lead (offense’s lead cannot grow indefinitely, ya know).
Next, let’s go by themes!


Compliance: as many other observers (Joshua at 451 Group comes to mind) noted, many of the security activities in 2010 will be defined by regulatory mandates such as PCI DSS, HIPAA/HITECH and others.  This will be the case from the smallest (larger extent) to the largest (smaller extent of compliance influence) organizations. I’d love to predict that people will finally get the spirit of PCI DSS (data security) and not just the letter (assessment readiness), but it is a tall one to forecast.
So, PCI DSS will continue its march. In fact, I bet (like I did in 2008) PCI DSS frenzy will further spread down-market - there is so much more Level 3s and Level 4s compared to Level 1 merchants. Now they all take payment cards, they are all insecure - thus, they might all be 0wned! BTW, nowadays nobody is predicting that PCI momentum will fizzle, as some did in 2007-2008.  While some people criticize it for specific requirements or missing things here and there, I still swear that those organizations who paid NO attention to security now do it ONLY because of PCI.
On the other hand, just as it was in 2008, ISO17799 (and its 2700x children), ITIL, COBIT frameworks likely won't be 'hot,' at least not in the US. Ad hoc approach (with some use of ideas from the above frameworks) to security management will still rule. In fact, more will try to base their entire security program on PCI DSS.
All this “comply-mancing” will bring both good and bad, as far as those organization’s ability to defend themselves from “bad shit” is concerned. And while we are on the subject…


Bad shit: what we have here is an intersection of two opposite trends: rampant, professional cybercrime and low occurrence of card fraud (as a percentage of card transaction volume). I explain this conundrum by predicting a scary picture of huge criminal opportunity, which still exists unchanged.
So, there will be more of rampant, professional cybercrime: from RBN to its descendants, from individual criminal entrepreneurs to emerging criminal enterprises, all signs point to dramatic rise of cybercrime. This is not some kinda FUD – this is simply logical consequence of today’s situation with the use of information systems: Insecure computers + lots of money + no punishment = go do it! (in the past, I made fun of people who predicted that “hackers will hack” – this item is different)
Still, I predict that low card fraud rates will continue: despite the above crime picture, many in the payment security industry know that fraud as a percentage of transaction volume is relatively low (I’ve seen estimates from 1% to 5% - in dollar volume this is till huge, by the way). Why is that? I explain it by the fact that criminal enterprises have limited bandwidth -you simply cannot pump ten billion dollars through a garage-style operation. My guess is that most if not all credit card numbers in circulation have already been stolen; the bad guys just didn’t have a chance to monetize most of them due to their limited bandwidth. This is exactly why selling card dumps is seen as a better [criminal] business than actually using stolen cards to buy goods – a counter-intuitive situation to many outside the industry.
In other words, there has not been a better time to go into a cybercrime business. The strategy is pretty much the “blue ocean” one: a lot of unexplored opportunity with low barrier to entry. You don’t want to wait until emerging “market leaders” will run the black business. Today, those folks have a unique opportunity to focus on “easy AND rich targets”, not “easy OR rich targets.” The best analogy is robbing a large bank with no security instead of large bank with security or small bank with no reliable security.


Intrusion tolerance is another trend (and its continues existence is in fact my prediction for 2010) which helps the “bad guys”: it is highly likely that most organizations have bots on their networks. What are they doing about it? Nothing much that actually helps. It is too hard; and many businesses just aren’t equipped – both skill-wise and technology wise – to combat a well-managed criminal operation which also happens to not be very disruptive to the operation of their own business. Your systems run OK and bots don’t bother you, what’s 5% of CPU and 10% of bandwidth between friends for sending penis enlargement spam? This view is admittedly cynical, but fairly realistic and results in a weird symbiosis that I call “intrusion tolerance.”
BTW, the Heartland guy said (http://www.govinfosecurity.com/articles.php?art_id=1774&rf=091509eg) “a breach is usually detected when the processing payer is notified of fraudulent use of cards.” This simply negates the existence of the entire security industry! Why is that? ‘Cause it is not doing enough to stop the tide. For example, it was very insightful to learn  that it took us on average 30 days in 2004 to patch a vulnerability, while in 2009 is takes 29 (!) days. See a huge improvement in security management practices here? 2010 will not change this trend: more bugs (such as all the Adobe stuff) moved the stats back to the Stone Age even as we improved our handling of platform patches.
Still, I doubt that “fully automated crime”, predicted back in the 90s by Donn Parker is fully possible today. If it were, the fraud rates and losses will probably grow – yes, you guessed right! – exponentially. So, I vote “no”, at least not in 2010. If that happens, the threshold will surely be crossed…


Cloud security: I predict much more noise and a bit more clarity (due to CSA work) in regards to information security requirements as more and more IT migrates to the cloud. The Holy Grail of “cloud security” – a credible cloud provider assessment guide/checklist – will emerge during 2010.

Finally, I am going to drag some of the 2008 predictions which are still valid and dust them off for 2010:

Platform security: just like Vista didn’t in 2007, Windows 7 won’t “make us secure.” The volume of W7 hacking  will increase as the year progresses.  Also, in 2008, I predicted an increase in Mac hacking. I’d like to repeat it as there is still room there :-)
And, only the truly lazy won’t predict more web application attacks. Of course! It is a true no-brainer, if there ever were one. Web application hacking is “a remote network service overflow” of the 2000s….

Incidents: just like in 2008, I predict no major utility/SCADA intrusion and thus no true “cyber-terrorism”  (not yet). Everybody predicts this one forever (as Rich mentions), but I am guessing we would need to wait at least few years for this one (see my upcoming predictions for 2020!) Sure, it makes for interesting thinking about why it did not happen; surely there is a massive fun factor in sending some sewage towards your enemies.  I'm happy to be correct here and have no such incidents happen, but I was predicting that something major and world changing would NOT happen so Feynman paradox is on my side.
A massive data theft to dwarf Heartland will probably be on the books. And it will include not some silly credit card number (really, who cares? :-)), but full identity - SSN and all.

Malware: sorry guys, but this year won’t be the Year of Mobile Malware either. As I discussed here, mobile malware is "a good idea" (for attackers) provided there is something valuable to steal – but it is just not the case yet in the US. There will be more PoC malware for iPhone, BlackBerry, maybe the Droid, but there will be no rampage. On the fun side, maybe we will finally see that Facebook malware/malicious application (that I predicted and consequently missed in 2008). This one will be fun to watch (others agree), and current malware defenses will definitely not stop this "bad boy," at least not before it does damage.

Risk management: more confusion. Enough said. In 2008, I said “Will we know what risk management actually is in the context of IT security? No!It sounds like we know no more now.


Various security technologies (refreshed from 2008):
  • Full disk encryption will not (yet?) become ubiquitous.
  • NAC will be largely forgotten by the end of 2010.
  • More whitelisting for host and network security will happen (but combined with blacklisting, which is certainly not going away!) As malware landscape becomes even more diverse, application whitelisting for security will start to shine even more. Collaborative filtering for malware will also become more noticeable.
  • Secure coding does not (yet?) becomes mainstream (definitely, 'not yet' on this one) It pains me to say that that I think that while this ball definitely started rolling (e.g. SANS is pushing it hard now) it won't be hurtling down the highway at full speed. 2011? Sure, maybe! :-)
  • More vendors will release SaaS versions of their security technologies and new SaaS security vendors will be launched.
  • Few people will be on the market for “just the network firewall.”
  • WAFs will finally boast near-mainstream adoption.
  • A sizable percentage of log management users will feed application logs into their systems. Not just payment application (for PCI DSS), but various enterprise application logs as well (and, of course, web application logs)
  • End-user organization will start talking (and buying) technologies specifically aimed at protecting virtual machines and other virtualization technology (the first year of “virt sec” tools will be 2010)
Overall, we will be approaching those thresholds – with unpredictable and interesting events likely during the course of the year!
Decade predictions will follow next!!! Go “security 2020”!
Possibly related posts:

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

On "The Next 100 Years"

As I said in my Twitter post about reading "The Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century" by Stratfor's George Friedman: "the book is unbelievably, shockingly awesome! It exudes pure awesomeness from every page!"

As you know, I was a long-term Stratfor fan (I was reading the site since they launched in 1994 or so), but lately I have evolved into a Stratfor addict. And the book (
"The Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century") didn't make my condition better, quite the opposite.

The basic premise of this treatise is this: the coming century will be ruled by an empire, so powerful economically, politically and militarily that nobody will be able to dislodge it from a top spot, even though some will try, much to their despair.

What is this empire? "A rising China"? Pah. "A resurent Russia"? Nah. "A united Europe." Hah. Its name is The United States of America. The book states simply: "The 21st century will be the American century" and "The United States is only at the beginning of its power."

Yes, indeed! Stratfor fo
under
George Friedman predicts that the US power is barely at its dawn, unlike some silly writers. His geopolitical analysis predicts that US will remain the leading world power for at least a century. He goes thru the events of 2020s (a new mini-cold war, then collapse of Russia), 2030s (a new crisis in the US) and then predicts a bit of a global war in 2050s. I will not post any more spoilers, go read the book; a few more juicy bits from the book follow below.

Some of the weapons to be used in mid-21st century wars:
  • Hypersonic UAVs armed with missiles
  • Space command stations and direct space-to-ground weapons
  • "Armored infrantrymen" in electrically-powered suits
  • Various types of robotic armored vehicles.
Below are some of my favorite quotes:
  • "Where humanity goes - war follows" (on war)
  • "The European Age has ended and the North American Age has begun" (on Europe)
  • "The United States has a huge margin of error. [...] The US therefore tends to be careless in how it execrises its power globally." (on some current events)
  • "The combined naval force of the rest of the world doesn't come close to equaling that of the US Navy" (on Navy)
  • "Mankind does not pose problems for itself for which it does not already have a solution" (on global warning; BTW, he is quoting Karl Marx here)
Should I mention it again? This is one of the best books I've read for a good number of years...

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Review of My 2008 Security Predictions

OK, so other bloggers are not doing it, maybe they are too shocked by The Death of the Internets, 2008 Edition, Rel. 2.0. I will, however!  Namely, I am going to revisit my 2008 predictions, posted here. BTW, I disagree that year-end predictions and reflection are a waste of time. I think  whenever you do it, it is useful to think and reflect about the long term.

So, here are the predictions (in italic) and how they did (in regular) after about 12 months of “facing reality.”

Platform security:

  • Vista makes us secure = no. People start to actually use it (in large numbers) = maybe. And then get 0wned = yes! The volume of Vista hacking (and then Win 2008 hacking) will increase as the year progresses.

This prediction was too safe; and also not too specific! Vista definitely did not make us secure. I can suggest that the part that “people start to actually use it” was a failure and Vista is NOT yet in wide use (definitely not on the corporate side). There was not much public ”Vista hacking” and few critical Vista vulns. On the other hand, Vista is not a security failure; it is just a regular one :-) So, is Vista the new OS/2?

  • Increase in Mac hacking = yes. The story is that Vista drives Mac adoption -> Mac increase in popularity will drive a new wave of Mac "0wnership"

Just as the previous one of his prediction was not too specific. I think we can claim that Mac hacking has increased and few critical Mac vulns crept up.  However, I don't have the metrics to prove it.  Definitely, the idea that “Mac = secure” has shrunk in popularity down to its minimum value: the size of a Mac fandom :-)

  • Web application hacking still on the growth path = yes. As they say, 'it will get worse before it gets better.' I am predicting that 2008 is still the year when it continues to be getting worse.

Yes, yes and yes! As Jeremiah said, web application hacking has finally arrived (after a few false starts).  However, I will call this “a pussy prediction” since it was so easy to get right.  In any case, go check your website for SQL injection, it is probably 0wned already :-)

Vulnerabilities:

  • 0days use becomes mundane = yes. This will be especially true for those browser-hacking folks who "need" to earn some cash off phishing and other data theft. Thus, "0day use" will no longer constitute news!

I’d say, “a miss,” despite all those fine folks 0wned thru IE 0days: a good zero day attack story still makes news. BTW, check Pete’s “0day tracker” here.

Hacking, data theft, etc:

  • Loss of trust towards legitimate Internet sites = yes. This is manifested by things like this point by the WS guys - more 0wned than malicious sites are used to spread malware. Even now I shudder from the thought that ANY site I visit might be displaying a malicious banner ad which is either bought or "hacked in" by the attackers. The implications of this are pretty horrifying!

I wanted to link to Rich’s  Amex example here, but why bother?  The whole root CA fakery is a much, much, much better example (brief, details, for laymen) Fake sites –> fake SSL sites is definitely an ominous possibility (even though this particular issue is not that scary [more cool than scary!], but it illustrates the point)

  • Major utility/SCADA hack = no (not yet). Everybody predicts this one forever (as Rich mentions), but I am guessing we would need to wait another year or so for this ...

This one makes for interesting thinking about why it did not happen; surely there is a massive fun factor in sending some sewage towards your enemies.  I'm happy to be correct here, but I was predicting that something major and world changing would NOT happen so Feynman paradox is on my side.

  • Cyber-terrorism = no (again, not yet!) Will it be a reality in the future? You bet! Just not now ...

Do I really have to comment on this one? Is there anybody with a semblance of a brain who expected 2008 to be the year of “cyber terrorism?” This was a safe one; an ultimate “pussy prediction." Easy to get right for the same reasons as the previous one, about SCADA.

  • A massive data theft to dwarf TJX = yes. And it will include not some silly credit card number (really, who cares? :-)), but full identity - SSN and all.

Ok, I missed this one – no “TJX 2.0”  this year.  I seemingly forgot about the famous Feynman paradox (see book), which says that if you predict the status quo, you’d be right more often than not. Still, I think that the current onslaught of security breaches is not the worst we have seen,  not by far.

Malware:

  • The year of mobile malware = no (not yet, if you insist!). As I discussed here, mobile malware is "a good idea" (for attackers) provided there is something valuable to steal (not the case yet in the US)

This one was a no-brainer; another “Fuzzer prediction.” In fact, I think that everybody who predicts it either is retarded or has something to sell.

  • More fun bots = yes. Bots are here to stay: they follow an overall trend for IT automation (seriously!). Think of bot infrastructures as "shadow IT" with their own SLAs, business model innovation, performance optimization tactics, etc
  • Fewer worms and viruses = yes (why write one if you can make money off bots?) As the share of "conventional" viruses and worms in the whole malware universe decreases, so will the popularity of "legacy" AV vendors ...

These two go hand and hand! Worms did NOT come back while bots proliferated. Unless folks invent new and cool ways of making money with worms, we are looking at further bot development. I’d say that it slowed down a bit since our defenses are so far behind. BTW, what was the latest infection numbers for bots? 30% of all desktops? 60%? 87%?

  • Facebook malware/malicious app = yes . This one will be fun to see (others agree), and current malware defenses will definitely not stop this "bad boy."On the flip side, there is not that much to steal off Facebook accounts ...

A miss. My guess is that there is still not much to steal from Facebook accounts (well, maybe that picture :-)) I think social networks will become more than an insignificant source of malware, just not today.

Compliance:

  • PCI DSS continues its march = yes. In fact, I bet PCI DSS frenzy will spread downmarket - there is sooooo much more Level 3s and Level 4s compared to Level 1 merchants. They all take CCs, they are all insecure - thus, they will all be 0wned! And then hopefully fined :-)

I am proud of this one, actually, and not only because of my job title. So many sore losers has predicted that PCI momentum will fizzle. No such “luck.”  While some people criticize it for specific requirements or missing things here and there, I swear that those who paid ABSOLUTELY NO attention to security now do it ONLY because of PCI. As a result, PCI DSS –> the world is a safer place for everybody!

  • ISO17799, ITIL, COBIT frameworks = maybe (again); they likely won't be 'hot,' at least not in the US; ad hoc approach (with some use of ideas from the above frameworks) to security management will still rule.

Ok, I took the cowardly route here too, I should have said “no” (not “maybe”) and I’d still be correct.  In fact, I think that even all this work on ISO2700X will NOT make ISO popular in the US.

Risk management:

  • Will we know what risk management actually is in the context of IT security = no. Some people (e.g here) might, but not the majority. And don't even get me started on security ROI :-) This part of security realm will continue to be occupied mostly by loudmouths who will spout, but never define; rant, but never explain; blab, but never clearly state. Sorry to those who are not like this, but you will continue to be in the minority in 2008.

Darn it, I stand by it. We still don’t know jack about how to apply “risk management” (aka “sometimes you think you manage risk, and sometimes the risk manages you” :-)), but there are some really good attempts at it.

Security technologies:

  • eVoting security will flare up = yes. Expect big and bad stories about evoting in preparation to the US elections. Maybe another "chad story", but with an "e-" added to it? Fun, fun, fun! :-)

Yeah, there was some noise, but not as much as I thought. So, maybe we’ll call it a miss.

  • Full disk encryption becomes popular = no. In fact, I predict that in 2008 encryption would be "the new firewall" - more and more people will hide from reality behind "we have encryption - we are safe now!" (check out my piece on encryption mistakes, while you are at it)

Not happened yet, so we will call it a hit. I do think that in 2009 it will get there though (I am typing this on a laptop with an encrypted hard drive! :-))

  • NAC= huh. Huh? The451Group said it best: "NAC has been the 'next big thing' for about four years now – that's a long time in the IT world." Others just say "NAC fallout has started." NAC vs insider attacks? Gimme a break... :-)

A hit, for sure. Was I the first to predict the demise of NAC? Probably not. In fact, Gartner folks make fun of some NAC predictions here. “You know what we said about NAC becoming a $2B market that will achieve 100% enterprise penetration in 2008?” Bua-ha-ha-ha.

  • More whitelisting for host and network security = yes (but combined with blacklisting, which is certainly not going away!) As malware landscape becomes even more diverse, application whitelisting for security will start to shine even more.

Hard to say; I am tempted to say that it is a hit, but the inertia of “Big AV” is still too huge.

  • Academic security research stays ridiculous = yes. Wrong problems, wrong solutions, wrong speed (as in: solving solved problems of day before yesterday...). There will be some exceptions: for example, some of the Project Honeynet academic participants deliver a punch!

Seriously? As ridiculous as ever. I will NOT be shocked if some academic will invent a new anti-worm solution :-) Ya know, to stop Blaster, Slammer and their ilk.

  • Secure coding becomes mainstream = no (definitely, 'not yet' on this one) It pains me to say that that I think that while this ball definitely started rolling (e.g. SANS is pushing it hard now) it won't be hurtling down the highway at full speed. 2009? Sure, may be!

Again, this was an easy one. The tricky part is to predict when it will become mainstream or will the economics keep it in the niche. Here is a thought:  maybe it will become mainstream WHEN somebody will make it easy!

No, no and no. A hit, for sure. Please remind me the latest DoD deadline for IPv6? 2004? :-)

Security market:

  • Mid-market and SMB security = yes! I think 2008 is the year when smaller organizations will start buying the types of security solutions that were only looked at by the large enterprises before. After all, they have the same problems to solve! They have compliance too. They lose data

Well, PCI is making it so, but sooooooo slowly. I guess I phrased it safely (“start buying”)  and so it is a hit, but I’d say that it will take more development before smaller organization will even get a chance to become secure.

  • More security SaaS (software as a service) = yes. It is not just Qualys anymore ... More companies will figure out ways to sell security software as a service. This is especially true due to the SMB security spending increase predicted above!

He-he, funny you’d mention that :-) Of course! Yes, definitely a hit. The question is who will make it work next.

  • 'Consolidation' = no. Whaaaaat? You just said 'no' to consolidation in security market? :-) Well, Vendor X might buy Vendor Z and Vendor N might go down in flames, but I predict that we will celebrate 2009 with just as many security vendors as we have today ...

A hit, a counter-intuitive one for some.

Logging and log management:

  • Database logging = yes. 2008 is the year when database logs will be collected and analyzed just as Unix syslog, Windows event logs and firewall logs are collected and analyzed today by just about everybody.

This is true to a large extent, but I will not say that “everybody is doing it” so it is a partial.

  • Application logging will start = yes. People will start collecting (at least collecting at first) application logs, not just firewall and server OS logs (and database logs, as mentioned above). Maybe ERP, CRM logs, maybe other large enterprise applications will lead the way. Major 'application logging waterfall' will occur later, however ...

Starting – yes, but definitely not en masse. I think log standards work (CEE) has to be more advanced before application logging and log analysis will spread.

  • Now that collection and management are 'taken care of' in many organizations, log analysis will (again...) come to the forefront = yes. In the end of 2008, we will be doing log analysis in a large number of fun, new ways - it won't just be about rule-based correlation and keyword searching anymore (Andrew agrees)

A nice fat piece of wishful thinking on my behalf. Log storage is still largely the state of the art, even though I trust splunk folks will help advance this one.

Dark horses, that will influence security in a major but unknown way in 2008:

  • Virtualization = people talk about hypervisor security and virtual security appliances as well as other fun stuff (e.g. this), but, in all honesty, we can't yet fathom the impact that the coming virtualization wave will have on information security.

This one give a lot of people  a lot of reasons to talk about fun stuff (Hoff comes to mind) Will I call 2008 a year of virtualization security? No, probably not.

  • Privacy = I predict that privacy issues, also privacy laws and public outcry due to privacy violations will impact the world of information security in 2008. However, my crystal ball is refusing to share the details on how exactly, citing "privacy concerns" :-)

This one will also have to wait. If you think about a) security b) privacy and c) compliance, then c) holds MUCH more mindshare today, sadly.

Conclusion: my personality type is hereby labeled “successful but cowardly predictor” :-)

2009 predictions are coming soon!!! Yes, they are!!

Monday, December 29, 2008

On 2008 (!) Security Predictions

Notice how few people (one example, Rothman will do it of course) actually go back to their past year predictions (all 2008 predictions via my delicious tracker) and review them. Is it because more than a few of those predictions are retarded? I dunno... I am working on my 2008 predictions review as we speak.

And, BTW, I am baaaack! Kauai is indeed as awesome as people said :-)

Thursday, December 11, 2008

On Retarded Year-end Security Predictions

‘Tis the season to predict (prediction tracker), BUT it is also a season to make fun of other’s idiotic or super-trivial predictions. Let’s start NOW!

More activity from the cyber underworld” (here)  - ya know, hackers will hack, phishers will phish, spammers will spam type stuff we need more of :-) Deep, deep insight in this.

Computer users can expect to see more spam” (here)  - now that we are on the subject of spam :-)

Someone will unplug the Internet” (here sadly) – no comment, really.

SCADA <anything REALLY bad>” (here) – to be really honest, I have not really seen it yet this year so no link, but it will come. Help yourself to previous year embarrassments :-)

The space <insert this vendor’s space> will be all the rage in ‘09!” (many) – if you are a NAC vendor saying this, you get 10x of the idiocy points. Congrats, you are now in prediction biz too :-)

Year of mobile malware AGAIN AGAIN AGAIN AGAIN AGAIN” (here) – the number of dangerous mobile viruses will grow 700% from 1 to 8 :-) [OK, I admit there are more than that, but what is their risk today?]

This would have made it into wonderful entry of “Nobody Is That Dumb ... Oh, Wait XI” (long forgotten series on my blog)

Monday, December 08, 2008

My 2009 Annual Predictions Tracker

As during past few years, I track all the end-of-the-year security predictions:
http://delicious.com/anton18/security+predictions+2009

There are a few there already, so start obsessing about them :-)

Also, I suggest other bloggers start making fun of others FAIL'ed :-) security predictions.... please don't be shy...

Monday, August 04, 2008

Ideal Tool to Solve Real Problems ... of the Near Future? - II

I would like to continue the discussion I started in my previous post called "Ideal Tool to Solve Real Problems ... of the Near Future?" Specifically, upon outlining some problems with logging, I will now forecast what will happen with them in 18-24 months.

  • Which problems will be solved and forgotten?
  • Which ones will simply go away?
  • Which ones will persist and in fact increase?
  • Finally, which new ones might emerge?

First, let me bet my ass that "Not knowing what to log" problem will be licked in 18-24 months; at least as far as major regulations go, people will have a pretty good idea a) what  the auditors want them to log (and review!) b) what they need to log for solving their problems. Now, for esoteric log sources (and custom applications) might still present a challenge from that point of view, but for basic "staples" (firewall, network gear, major OS) the mystery will be over (again, see "Tell me EXACTLY what to log for PCI?"  for reference)

Next, the problem of "Log volume" will  definitely get worse, much worse.  One might think that 100,000 each second is a lot of log - but there WILL BE more at many companies! Big application log explosion is coming, fueled by the need to address logging in areas where such motivation was lacking before (basically, custom and vertical applications) as well as harness the power of "uncommon" logs for such tasks as fraud analysis or SOA monitoring. Keep in mind that even though in some areas logging is NOT a preferred way of monitoring and auditing activities (see this discussion on database logs here), application logging will still explode on us...

The problem of "Log diversity" (the fact that most logs all look different in format and meaning) will get worse before it will get better - and better it WILL (!!!) get since standards are being developed. We will see people struggling with all sorts bizarro log data in the coming years. Virtualization, web services and SOA, various ERP applications and even cloud services will increase the diversity of logging in the coming years.

Similar to the above, a problem of "Bad logs" (ones that are subjective, miss key information, require groping for a crystal ball to understand, turn log analysis into dark voodooistic experience or are useless in some other way) will also follow the pattern of the above log diversity problems - it will get worse before it gets better (via the CEE standard effort that now covers the OpenXDAS effort as well!) I noticed that people started asked me questions about "how to do application logging right?" and "what to tell application developers about logging?" which almost never happened in the past. BTW, watch my blog for some uber-fun info on that!

"Getting the logs"  has gotten much easier in recent years; agentless collectors like Project Lasso (which, BTW, just got updated) and grabbing  files remotely via secure protocols made application log collection easier (syslog-NG with TCP transfer and buffering also helped). Next, Windows 2008 will make it MUCH easier for the whole Windows kingdom due to their use of web services (thanks Eric!). However, in the future it might resurface as we try to collect logs from "weird" places, again, clouds come to mind as well as virtual environments (e.g. how do you get logs off a dormant VM?). What's the next frontier in this area? Log discovery - automatic finding and identifying log files on systems in order to analyze and retain them (Yo, my t-shirt-making colleagues... :-))

All this, however, pales in comparison with my favorite "uber-challenge", "Making sense of logs in  an automated fashion" - this baby is definitely not going away in 2-3 years. Much more research is needed to make that "log->conclusion" jump automatically without head-scratching, invoking ancient deities and cursing under ones's breath. Only then we can attempt to reliable handle "proactive logging" (i.e. analyzing various failure or compromise precursors in logs and then predicting the future based on them), another Holy Grail of logging domain.

Anything new will emerge? Yes, I think awareness of the "Logging Gap" problem will grow. "Logging gap" happens when you combine "a need to log" with utter "inability to do so."  For example, this will happen when people will know that they HAVE TO log, say, for compliance, but will have no way of doing it due to application or platform limitations. This will become one of the challenges and special "logging add-ons" will appear to close the logging gap and create additional logs where activity audit is desperately needed, but native logging is not helping to achieve it.

Also, I think people will finally wake up to "Log security" challenges - i.e. producing for use as evidence, compliance attestations, etc. Log security is not getting the attention it deserves, but I think this challenge will finally emerge in full force in the next 2-3 years. My next poll will address that :-)

Anything else I missed? Share away!

Related posts:

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Wow! Stratfor on Cyberwar

Wow! Stratfor publishes this piece which starts with "This is the first in a series of analyses on the emergence of cyberspace as battlespace" and then they even go as far as "in addition to being a revolutionary medium of communication, the Internet also offers a devastating means of waging war."

Fun!

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Mike R on "DLP"

Mike R makes a good point here when he says that "data leak prevention (DLP) stalls in 2008, continuing to be a solution looking for a problem. " He also predicts that DLP will suffer in the marketplace from "poor man's DLP" or "good enough DLP using other technologies."

I plan to outline just such a plan: poor man's DLP using logs. Yes, it will suck :-), but it will be free, not "$500,000". What can I say, 'Welcome to the world of "good enough technology!"'

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Internet Down?

Fun, thought-inspiring reading:
Papers like that help put system and network security in the right context: if your business will run just fine even after losing your IT, your connectivity and all your data (e.g. you are a lemonade stand! :-)) than it is OK to fire that security manager :-) If not, get to work - your security likely needs improvement!

So, think about it, it is 2008 now and the paper says that "for the non-Web-centric business, the loss of the Internet likely would likely be, at the very least, a major inconvenience as well" (obviously, "[online] businesses would also come to a crashing halt").

Now think 2018. Will a typical business of 2018 survive that intact?

If you are still not getting it, think 2028. Will there be any businesses that will survive the "stop of the Internet"? My guess is NO (not even lemonade stands....).

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

What If It Happened in 1979?

Now, I like to label all sorts of things as "fun read," but there is a limit. I was about to say "hey, fun read!" but then thought better of it. So read "Timeline 9: "The Big D" - what if "the mid-east war escalated and the tensions between the superpowers grew. March 17, 1979 nuclear war broke out: Egyptian missiles with Soviet warheads struck against Israel ..." (read it) This is indeed one of the most detailed and enlightening "alternative future" scenarios that I've seen.

Scary World Ahead?!

No, I appreciate a good piece of FUD, but one of my 2008 predictions is coming to life with scary, scary speed!

I predicted that "Loss of trust towards legitimate Internet sites = yes. This is manifested by things like this point by the WS guys - more 0wned than malicious sites are used to spread malware. Even now I shudder from the thought that ANY site I visit might be displaying a malicious banner [or serving malware thru other means] ad which is either bought or "hacked in" by the attackers. The implications of this are pretty horrifying!" and it does worry me, but I am not yet truly paranoid about this.

OK, change that "am" to "was." Today I officially became Internet-phobic (where do I sign up? :-)) when I've heard (through a little birdie, as usual) that one of the security publication websites was 0wned (maybe thu banners? the details are not available yet) and serving malware. Nice! In a few minutes, I was also informed that one of the leading business publications is also serving malware. Fuck!

Yes, my personal system probably won't be 0wned by this, but many will be (IE users are clearly screwed, but I doubt that Firefox users or Mac fans will be immune either).

So, welcome to 0wned Internet 2.0, where every site is 0wned and is serving malware?

Bonus question: do you think major brand AV will protect you from the above?

UPDATE: a similar post from Andy, IT Guy called "Will Malware Kill the Internet?" is here. And another update on that from him (even more insightful)

UPDATE2: another fun one "Trend Micro Hacked - Serving Malicious Iframes"

More Required Reading: Mike R

Mike R was going thru his 2007 predictions and checking them (good idea!); all are fun, but this are extra-hot:


and while we are at it: this bit from Mike on security management trends in 2008 is fun too (especially check his reference to log management!)

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Fun 2008 Outlook With ...

.. the terms "risk", "threat", etc defined!

Among all the 2008 predictions I am tagging, this one is special:Top information security risks for 2008. Apart from the interesting insight, they - wow!- defined and used the terms for threat, vulnerability, risk and control. The actual doc is called top information security threats, vulnerabilities and impacts, along with some risk scenarios and controls [PDF]

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

My 2008 Security Predictions!

I just have to start with this quote from Rich Mogul: "... Legions of armchair futurists slobber over their keyboards, spilling obvious dribble that they either predict every year until it finally happens or is so nebulous that they claim success if a butterfly flaps its wings in Liechtenstein." :-) Amen to that, Rich. Onwards to my 2008 predictions!

So, just as in 2006 and 2007, I am coming up with security predictions that cover both technology and market. I just posted a review of my last's year's prediction where I mostly erred on the conservative side. I promise to be more 'extreme' this year, while still keeping the old wisdom of Richard Feynman in mind: if you predict the status quo, you are more likely to be correct...

Here is my 'twitter-style' (I guess what used to be called telegraph-style :-)) view of predictions in no particular order:

Platform security:

  • Vista makes us secure = no. People start to actually use it (in large numbers) = maybe. And then get 0wned = yes! The volume of Vista hacking (and then Win 2008 hacking) will increase as the year progresses.
  • Increase in Mac hacking = yes. The story is that Vista drives Mac adoption -> Mac increase in popularity will drive a new wave of Mac "0wnership"
  • Web application hacking still on the growth path = yes. As they say, 'it will get worse before it gets better.' I am predicting that 2008 is still the year when it continues to be getting worse.

Vulnerabilities:

  • 0days use becomes mundane = yes. This will be especially true for those browser-hacking folks who "need" to earn some cash off phishing and other data theft. Thus, "0day use" will no longer constitute news!

Hacking, data theft, etc:

  • Loss of trust towards legitimate Internet sites = yes. This is manifested by things like this point by the WS guys - more 0wned than malicious sites are used to spread malware. Even now I shudder from the thought that ANY site I visit might be displaying a malicious banner ad which is either bought or "hacked in" by the attackers. The implications of this are pretty horrifying!
  • Major utility/SCADA hack = no (not yet). Everybody predicts this one forever (as Rich mentions), but I am guessing we would need to wait another year or so for this ...
  • Cyber-terrorism = no (again, not yet!) Will it be a reality in the future? You bet! Just not now ...
  • A massive data theft to dwarf TJX = yes. And it will include not some silly credit card number (really, who cares? :-)), but full identity - SSN and all.

Malware:

  • The year of mobile malware = no (not yet, if you insist!). As I discussed here, mobile malware is "a good idea" (for attackers) provided there is something valuable to steal (not the case yet in the US)
  • More fun bots = yes. Bots are here to stay: they follow an overall trend for IT automation (seriously!). Think of bot infrastructures as "shadow IT" with their own SLAs, business model innovation, performance optimization tactics, etc
  • Fewer worms and viruses = yes (why write one if you can make money off bots?) As the share of "conventional" viruses and worms in the whole malware universe decreases, so will the popularity of "legacy" AV vendors ...
  • Facebook malware/malicious app = yes . This one will be fun to see (others agree), and current malware defenses will definitely not stop this "bad boy."On the flip side, there is not that much to steal off Facebook accounts ...

Compliance:

  • PCI DSS continues its march = yes. In fact, I bet PCI DSS frenzy will spread downmarket - there is sooooo much more Level 3s and Level 4s compared to Level 1 merchants. They all take CCs, they are all insecure - thus, they will all be 0wned! And then hopefully fined :-)
  • ISO17799, ITIL, COBIT frameworks = maybe (again); they likely won't be 'hot,' at least not in the US; ad hoc approach (with some use of ideas from the above frameworks) to security management will still rule.

Risk management:

  • Will we know what risk management actually is in the context of IT security = no. Some people (e.g here) might, but not the majority. And don't even get me started on security ROI :-) This part of security realm will continue to be occupied mostly by loudmouths who will spout, but never define; rant, but never explain; blab, but never clearly state. Sorry to those who are not like this, but you will continue to be in the minority in 2008.

Security technologies:

  • eVoting security will flare up = yes. Expect big and bad stories about evoting in preparation to the US elections. Maybe another "chad story", but with an "e-" added to it? Fun, fun, fun! :-)
  • Full disk encryption becomes popular = no. In fact, I predict that in 2008 encryption would be "the new firewall" - more and more people will hide from reality behind "we have encryption - we are safe now!" (check out my piece on encryption mistakes, while you are at it)
  • NAC= huh. Huh? The451Group said it best: "NAC has been the 'next big thing' for about four years now – that's a long time in the IT world." Others just say "NAC fallout has started." NAC vs insider attacks? Gimme a break... :-)
  • More whitelisting for host and network security = yes (but combined with blacklisting, which is certainly not going away!) As malware landscape becomes even more diverse, application whitelisting for security will start to shine even more.
  • Academic security research stays ridiculous = yes. Wrong problems, wrong solutions, wrong speed (as in: solving solved problems of day before yesterday...). There will be some exceptions: for example, some of the Project Honeynet academic participants deliver a punch!
  • Secure coding becomes mainstream = no (definitely, 'not yet' on this one) It pains me to say that that I think that while this ball definitely started rolling (e.g. SANS is pushing it hard now) it won't be hurtling down the highway at full speed. 2009? Sure, may be!
  • IPv6 = no (while most think 'not yet', some start thinking 'not ever') In other words, Internet 'secure by design' = pipe dream in 2008.

Security market:

  • Mid-market and SMB security = yes! I think 2008 is the year when smaller organizations will start buying the types of security solutions that were only looked at by the large enterprises before. After all, they have the same problems to solve! They have compliance too. They lose data
  • More security SaaS (software as a service) = yes. It is not just Qualys anymore ... More companies will figure out ways to sell security software as a service. This is especially true due to the SMB security spending increase predicted above!
  • 'Consolidation' = no. Whaaaaat? You just said 'no' to consolidation in security market? :-) Well, Vendor X might buy Vendor Z and Vendor N might go down in flames, but I predict that we will celebrate 2009 with just as many security vendors as we have today ...

Logging and log management:

  • Database logging = yes. 2008 is the year when database logs will be collected and analyzed just as Unix syslog, Windows event logs and firewall logs are collected and analyzed today by just about everybody.
  • Application logging will start = yes. People will start collecting (at least collecting at first) application logs, not just firewall and server OS logs (and database logs, as mentioned above). Maybe ERP, CRM logs, maybe other large enterprise applications will lead the way. Major 'application logging waterfall' will occur later, however ...
  • Now that collection and management are 'taken care of' in many organizations, log analysis will (again...) come to the forefront = yes. In the end of 2008, we will be doing log analysis in a large number of fun, new ways - it won't just be about rule-based correlation and keyword searching anymore (Andrew agrees)

Last year's drag-ons :-) and ongoing trends:

  • Some things make dumb predictions since they are so pitifully obvious and have been going on for years already. Thus, I pile them in this section...
  • So, client vs server exploitation: it started a few years back and will continue, for sure: more client vulnerabilities will be used to 0wn more desktops. Similarly, application vulnerabilities will beat platform ones. And targeted, commercially-driven attacks will overtake indiscriminate ones (another "no-brainer" that some try to sell as a prediction...)
  • Both of the above will power further evolution of network and system security into data and broader information security (it will be happening for another 3-5 years)
  • More fun "web 2.0" threats will come our way, but then again, this is true about most of the technologies that are being actively adopted ...

Dark horses, that will influence security in a major but unknown way in 2008:

  • Virtualization = people talk about hypervisor security and virtual security appliances as well as other fun stuff (e.g. this), but, in all honesty, we can't yet fathom the impact that the coming virtualization wave will have on information security.
  • Privacy = I predict that privacy issues, also privacy laws and public outcry due to privacy violations will impact the world of information security in 2008. However, my crystal ball is refusing to share the details on how exactly, citing "privacy concerns" :-)

Come back in Jan 2009 to see how I did!

Any comments? Additional predictions?

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Dr Anton Chuvakin