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From the March 2007 issue
End point security: a five-year craze?
Deperimeterization secures sensitive corporate data. End point security is an essential ingredient in this concept. But how effective is it? Will everyone be jumping on the EPS bandwagon or will it prove too expensive and too impractical for small and medium sized companies? Cath Everett reports.
End point security is widely considered as a key component in any transition towards implementing the much-hyped concept of deperimeterization.
But such a contention raises important questions as to how mature the end point security (EPS) market actually is today. Is deperimeterization really the optimum security choice for every type of organisation?
Firstly, it is necessary to define both terms. Traditionally, client
devices such as desktops and laptops -also known as end points -
were safeguarded against threats by firewalls at the network gateway
or anti-virus scanners on central servers. End point security however,
shifts the focus to the devices themselves, which run their own
local security software.
The aim here is not only to defend the end points themselves, but to protect the corporate network from any potential harm caused by unsafe devices, using techniques such as access control and quarantine.
Deperimeterization, meanwhile, concentrates less on protecting individual items of equipment and more on defending sensitive corporate data and data flows.
To date, organizations tend to focus the majority of their security efforts generically at the network boundary to protect the systems within. Deperimeterization however, is about creating a secure architecture to help safeguard core systems and data against leakage using a defence-in-depth approach.
No need for expensive MPLS-style networks
The idea is this. If such systems and data are effectively protected,
internal staff, remote workers and external stakeholders should
all be able to securely exploit public infrastructure and services
such as the internet to collaborate with each other and access the
systems and information they need. Organizations therefore, should
no longer need to invest in expensive MPLS-style networks.
A real-world example of this theory in practice is BP. The company
has 18,000 staff using the internet to undertake their day-to-day
work as part of a five-year plan to expose as many of the oil giant's
applications as possible to the public network in a bid to cut costs.
Join in or get left behind…
Paul Simmonds, author of a number of positioning papers at the Jericho
Forum, which originally came up with the term and evangelizes the
concept, explains his take on the new security measure. "Deperimeterization
comes to the conclusion that corporate and business borders simply
inhibit business, while adding little in terms of security. The
issue is really one of data rights management, and the philosophy
says that the closer you get to the data, the easier it is to protect."
Simmonds uses the analogy of the US state, which does not opt to
protect President Bush simply by deploying border guards. "It
gives him personal protection and it's the same for security -VIP
data has to be protected up close," says Simmonds.
However, while he describes deperimeterization as "a concept,
a framework, even a business solution that should encompass all
of your business", Simmonds sees EPS as more of a "point
security solution, which may have some part to play in either the
transition to a properly deperimeterized state, or the final end-state".
This suggests that while EPS technology is useful in certain circumstances,
for wireless infrastructures for example, ultimately its life span
will be limited.
" You'll see a peak in end point security in about three years
time and then it'll decline. It has probably got a maximum five-year
lifetime and then there'll be much better technology around. Various
security protocols for things like voice-over-IP will be start to
be delivered," Simmonds says. "At that point, we'll say
'it was a good idea at the time' and there'll always be niche areas
where it's deployed, but for widespread corporate deployment, my
take is that it'll never happen."
But it is within this five-year timeframe that Simmonds also expects
deperimeterization to move into the mainstream. "You can just
keep on adding security, but it will only last so long like King
Canute holding back the waves. Whether people like it or not, deperimeterization
is happening and they can either do something actively about it,
or sit back and follow the flow, although that won't give them the
same business advantages," Simmonds says.
Actively deploying deperimeterization however is no mean feat, he
admits. It involves re-architecting organizations' infrastructure
to "build in security from the ground up" and because
of the high levels of investment this entails, it necessitates buy-in
at senior levels.
EPS: a long way from perfect
Other industry watchers are not so convinced that the end is nigh
for EPS or that deperimeterization is the answer for everyone. Roy
Harari, Comsec Consulting's UK managing director and vice president
of international business, believes that tackling EPS will be a
central challenge for many organizations during 2007.
" It's a key issue of concern, but I'd say that the majority
have yet to do it effectively. They're thinking about it, listening
to the vendors and trying to understand what will work where, but
in the meantime, they're either trying to enforce stronger policies
or laying down draconian rules," he says.
For example, while most companies have insisted that programs such
as anti-virus and anti-spam run on client devices for some time,
the introduction of other technologies to tackle issues such as
intrusion prevention, encryption or policy compliance such as Cisco's
Network Access Control, are patchy at best.
This is not least, says Mike Gillespie, principal consultant at
Advent Information Systems, because it is still unclear which of
these technologies will take off or which vendors are likely to
become market leaders.
' In some ways, it's a bit like the old VHS/Betamax situation at
the moment. A lot of people are waiting to see which technologies
bed in or not, so there are early adopters but the rest are still
waiting to see what happens," explains Gillepsie.
Moreover, tackling EPS issues involves more than just ramming the
technology in and hoping for the best. Phil Huggins, chief technology
officer at consultancy Information Risk Management, believes that
in order to build it into the infrastructure and manage it effectively,
the network estate simply has to be well architected in the first
place.
"Some organizations have implemented a bit of end point security,
some have done a bit of this and that and others have done nothing.
Where it has been introduced completely though, organizations have
consistent builds across their entire network estate, otherwise
it becomes a nightmare to manage. So end point security is as much
about how you do it as about the technology itself," he says.
EPS: essential ingredient for deperimeterization
Nonetheless, he does see EPS as a useful component in any move to
deperimeterization, particularly if organizations are using thin
client architectures, because it provides a means of preventing
data leakage from one of the most vulnerable areas of the corporate
network.
" The organic growth of interconnected back end systems and
applications has grown dramatically, which means that many industry
chains are now integrated from clients all the way back to the product
or service provider. So when it comes to deperimeterization, it's
clear that the boundaries people are talking about are in many cases
already broken," says Huggins.
He therefore believes that the concept makes a lot of sense for
organizations that have a lot of partners and a highly integrated
supply chain, but much less sense for those that are operate in
a more standalone fashion.
" It's not a one size-fits-all response and I don't think many
organizations will deperimeterize totally. Most will adopt some
elements of it, probably on a piecemeal basis, some will use it
as a roadmap and have the rigour to do it, but for others, it may
not be the right solution," Huggins says.
Deperimeterization: too big for its boots?
Gillespie is even more sceptical, however, believing that deperimeterization
is a big company concept for big companies wanting to improve the
management of their huge and unwieldy networks.
" This has been dreamt up and is being driven by the Jericho
Forum, which includes companies like ICI, HSBC and HBOS," he
says. "It's about big global blue chips trying to drive a security
agenda that's only really suitable for large corporates. If you
set up a similar organization for SMEs, I'm sure they'd come up
with quite a different argument."
As a result, he says, the majority of firms are looking at the
debate from the sidelines to see where it all goes. To date, they
have chosen not to leap head first into it. Another point, however,
in his view, is that network perimeters are not so much disappearing
as becoming more fluid.
" The perimeter has changed and we need a more modular, flexible
approach to that. But organizations have invested heavily in gateway-based
security so they're not going to throw it away," Gillespie
says. Instead he believes it is more likely that small to medium
organizations will adopt a "security layering" or defence-in-depth
approach, "which is not a new concept".
This means that, while there will be more focus on client security,
companies will still continue to undertake network segmentation,
run firewalls and other more traditional technologies at the gateway.
On the one hand, Gillespie argues, most firms do not have the money
to invest in cutting edge "deperimeterization" technologies
such as Secerno's database assurance platform or to re-architect
their infrastructure to cope with the shift. On the other, they
are comfortable with their existing perimeter technology because
they know what to expect and "it will take a long time to bring
down the expectation of having a perimeter to secure".
As a result, Huggins concludes that the most likely scenario is
that, "rather than everyone hitting the extreme philosophical
stance that we all live on the internet and that's that, we're more
likely to see components of deperimeterization being adopted over
time due to ever increasing levels of connectedness".
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