who is the next target proactive approaches to data security
DESCRIPTION
The landscape of threats to sensitive data is changing. New technologies bring with them new vulnerabilities, and organizations like Target are failing to react properly to the shifts around them. What's needed is an approach equal to the persistent, advanced attacks companies face every day. The sooner we start adopting the same proactive thinking hackers are using to get at our data, the better we will be able to protect it.TRANSCRIPT
WHO IS THE NEXT TARGET?WHO IS THE NEXT TARGET?
Proactive Approaches to Data Security
Ulf MattssonCTO, Protegrity
Working with the Payment Card Industry Security Standards Council (PCI SSC):
• PCI SSC Tokenization Task Force
• PCI SSC Encryption Task Force
• PCI SSC Point to Point Encryption Task Force
• PCI SSC Risk Assessment SIG
Ulf Mattsson & PCI Data Security Standards
• PCI SSC eCommerce SIG
• PCI SSC Cloud SIG
• PCI SSC Virtualization SIG
• PCI SSC Pre-Authorization SIG
• PCI SSC Scoping SIG
• PCI SSC 2013 – 2014 Tokenization Task Force
2
New threats and methods of attack
New technologies offer new vulnerabilities
Lessons learned from the Target breach
Topics
Lessons learned from the Target breach
The importance of proactive thinking
New technologies to properly secure data
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THE CHANGING THREAT LANDSCAPETHREAT LANDSCAPE
4
How have the methods of attack shifted?
Data Loss Worries IT Pros Most
5
Source: 2014 Trustwave Security Pressures Report
Data Loss Worries IT Pros Most
6
Source: 2014 Trustwave Security Pressures Report
“It’s clear the bad guys are winning at a faster rate than the good guys
Security - We Are Losing Ground
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Source: searchsecurity.techtarget.com/news/2240215422/In-2014-DBIR-preview-Verizon-says-data-breach-response-gap-widening
rate than the good guysare winning, and we’ve got to solve that.”- 2014 Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report
Security - We Are Losing Ground
“…Even though security is improving, things are getting worse faster, so
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getting worse faster, so we're losing ground even as we improve .”- Security expert Bruce Schneier
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/bruce-schneier-apple-google-smartphone-security-2012-11
Security - We Are Losing Ground
“Cyber attack fallout could cost the global economy $3 trillion by
9
Source: McKinsey report on enterprise IT security implications released in January 2014.
economy $3 trillion by 2020.”
PRIME TARGETS FOR DATA BREACHDATA BREACH
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CIA and NSA Tell Utilities How To Up Cybersecurity
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Source: Smart Grid News
The Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) has published a new report titled "Cybersecurity and the North American Electric Grid: New Policy Approaches to
Address an Evolving Threat."
The U.S. government's Industrial Control Systems Cyber Emergency Response Team
Responded to more than 200 incidents
53% aimed at the energy sector.
So far, there have not been any successful catastrophic attacks on the US energy grid
Energy Sector a Prime Target for Cyber Attacks
attacks on the US energy grid
Ongoing debate about the risk of a "cyber Pearl Harbor" attack.
Source: www.csoonline.com/article/748580/energy-sector-a-prime-target-for-cyber-attacks(Oct. 2012 - May 2013)
12
The global energy sector has become vulnerable to cyber-attack
Increasingly adopting internet-based industrial control systems in an effort to cut costs
The industry has yet to experience business
Energy Sector Faces Cyber-attack Threat: Marsh
interruption or physical damage as a result of a cyber-attack
Being "disproportionately" targeted by increasingly sophisticated hacker networks the broker
Source: 2014 Report, Insurance broker Marsh
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BEWARE MALWAREBEWARE MALWARE
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15
New Malware
Source: mcafee.com/us/resources/reports/rp-quarterly-threat-q3-2013.pdf
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Total Malicious Signed Malware
Source: mcafee.com/us/resources/reports/rp-quarterly-threat-q3-2013.pdf
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Targeted Malware Topped the Threats
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62% said that the pressure to protect from data breaches also increased over the past year.
Source: 2014 Trustwave Security Pressures Report
US - Targeted Malware Top Threat
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Source: 2014 Trustwave Security Pressures Report
FBI uncovered 20 cyber attacks against retailers in the past year that utilized methods similar to Target incident
Believe POS malware crime will continue to grow over the near term
Despite law enforcement and security firms' actions to mitigate it
FBI Memory-Scraping Malware Warning
mitigate it
Report: “Recent Cyber Intrusion Events Directed Toward Retail Firms”
Source: searchsecurity.techtarget.com/news/2240213143/FBI-warns-of-memory-scraping-malware-in-wake-of-Target-breach
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THE CHANGING TECHNOLOGY TECHNOLOGY LANDSCAPE
What effect, if any, does the rise of “Big Data” have on breaches?
21
Has Your Organization Already Invested in Big Data?
22
Source: Gartner
Holes in Big Data…
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Source: Gartner
Many Ways to Hack Big Data
24
Hackers& APT
RoguePrivileged
Users
UnvettedApplications
OrAd Hoc
Processes
Many Ways to Hack Big Data
MapReduce(Job Scheduling/Execution System)
Pig (Data Flow) Hive (SQL) Sqoop
ETL Tools BI Reporting RDBMS
Avr
o (S
eria
lizat
ion)
Zoo
keep
er (
Coo
rdin
atio
n)
Hackers
UnvettedApplications
OrAd Hoc
Processes
Source: http://nosql.mypopescu.com/post/1473423255/apache-hadoop-and-hbase
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HDFS(Hadoop Distributed File System)
Hbase (Column DB)
Avr
o (S
eria
lizat
ion)
Zoo
keep
er (
Coo
rdin
atio
n)
PrivilegedUsers
Big Data (Hadoop) was designed for data access, not security
Security in a read-only environment introduces new challenges
Massive scalability and performance requirements
Big Data Vulnerabilities and Concerns
Sensitive data regulations create a barrier to usability, as data cannot be stored or transferred in the clear
Transparency and data insight are required for ROI on Big Data
26
TARGET DATA BREACHBREACH
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What can we learn from the Target breach?
Target Breach Optioned as Sony Feature Film
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Source: Welivesecurity.com
Target Corp. said in its annual report that a massive security breach has hurt its image and business, while spawning dozens of legal actions, and it noted it can't estimate how big the financial tab will end up being
Security software picked up on suspicious activity
Target Says It Ignored Early Signs of Data Breach
Security software picked up on suspicious activity after a cyberattack was launched, but it decided not to take immediate action
Received security alerts on Nov. 30 that indicated malicious software had appeared in its network
Source: SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission )
29
Target Data Breach, U.S. Secret Service & iSIGHT
Target CIO Beth Jacob resigned
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Memory Scraping Malware – Target Breach
Payment CardTerminal
Point Of Sale Application
Memory Scraping Malware
Authorization,Settlement
…
Web Server
Memory Scraping Malware
Russia
31
Credentials were stolen from Fazio Mechanical in a malware-injecting phishing attack sent to employees of the firm by email
• Resulted in the theft of at least 40 million customer records containing financial data such as debit and credit card information.
• In addition, roughly 70 million accounts were compromised that included addresses and mobile numbers.
The data theft was caused by the installation of malware on
How The Breach at Target Went Down
the firm's point of sale machines
The subsequent file dump containing customer data is reportedly flooding the black market
• Starting point for the manufacture of fake bank cards, or provide data required for identity theft.
Source: Brian Krebs and www.zdnet.com/how-hackers-stole-millions-of-credit-card-records-from-target-7000026299/
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The FTC is probing the massive hack of credit card information
Target could face federal charges for failing to protect its customers' data from hackers
When you see a data breach of this size with clear harm to consumers, it's clearly something that the
Target May Face Federal Suit Over Privacy Fumble
harm to consumers, it's clearly something that the FTC would be interested in looking at," said Jon Leibowitz, a former FTC chairman
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat, urged the FTC to investigate the Target hack soon after it became public in December
Source: Bloomberg Businessweek
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Who Is The Next Target?
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It’s not like other businesses are using some special network security practices that Target
doesn’t know about.
They just haven’t been hit yet.
No number of traps, bars, or alarms will keep out the determined thief
Source: www.govtech.com/security
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THINKING LIKE A HACKERHACKER
How can we shift from reactive to proactive thinking?
36
The Modern Day Bank Robber
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Current Breach Discovery Methods
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Verizon 2013 Data-breach-investigations-report & 451 Research
You must assume the systems will be breached.
Once breached, how do you know you've been compromised?
You have to baseline and understand what 'goodness' looks like and look for deviations from goodness
McAfee and Symantec can't tell you what normal looks like in your own systems.
Only monitoring anomalies can do that
CISOs say SIEM Not Good for Security Analytics
Only monitoring anomalies can do that
Monitoring could be focused on a variety of network and end-user activities, including network flow data, file activity and even going all the way down to the packets
Source: 2014 RSA Conference, moderator Neil MacDonald, vice president at Gartner
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TURNING THE TIDE
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What new technologies and techniques can be used to prevent future attacks?
What if a
Social Security number or
Credit Card Number Credit Card Number
in the Hands of a Criminal
was Useless?
41
COMPLIANCEVS.
SECURITYSECURITY
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Target was certified as meeting the standard for the payment card industry in September 2013
Compliance can protect us from liability, but whether it actually protects us from loss of business and loss of data is not so clear
Compliance is a minimal deterrent that everyone
Target Breach Lesson: PCI Compliance Isn't Enough
Compliance is a minimal deterrent that everyone has to have in place
If you're driving a car, you're expected to have a driver's license. That doesn't make you a safe driver
Source: TechNewsWorld
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Protection of cardholder data in memory
Clarification of key management dual control and split knowledge
Recommendations on making PCI DSS business-as-usual and best practices
Security policy and operational procedures added
PCI DSS 3.0
Security policy and operational procedures added
Increased password strength
New requirements for point-of-sale terminal security
More robust requirements for penetration testing
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Coarse Grained Security
• Access Controls
• Volume Encryption
• File Encryption
Fine Grained Security
Evolution of Data Security Methods
Time
Fine Grained Security
• Access Controls
• Field Encryption (AES & )
• Masking
• Tokenization
• Vaultless Tokenization
45
Old and flawed:
Minimal access
levels so people
can only carry
Access Control
Risk
High –
can only carry
out their jobs
46
AccessPrivilege
LevelI
High
I
Low
Low –
Applying the Protection Profile to the
Structure of each Sensitive Data Fields allows for Sensitive Data Fields allows for
a Wider Range of Granular Authority Options
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Examples: De-Identified Sensitive Data Field Real Data Tokenized / Pseudonymized
Name Joe Smith csu wusoj
Address 100 Main Street, Pleasantville, CA 476 srta coetse, cysieondusbak, CA
Date of Birth 12/25/1966 01/02/1966
Telephone 760-278-3389 760-389-2289
E-Mail Address [email protected] [email protected]
SSN 076-39-2778 076-28-3390
CC Number 3678 2289 3907 3378 3846 2290 3371 3378
Business URL www.surferdude.com www.sheyinctao.com
Fingerprint Encrypted
Photo Encrypted
X-Ray Encrypted
Healthcare / Financial Services
Dr. visits, prescriptions, hospital stays and discharges, clinical, billing, etc.Financial Services Consumer Products and activities
Protection methods can be equally applied to the actual data, but not needed with de-identification
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Risk
High –
Old:
Minimal access
levels – Least New :
Much greater
The New Data Protection - Tokenization
AccessPrivilege
LevelI
High
I
Low
Low –
levels – Least
Privilege to avoid
high risks
Much greater
flexibility and
lower risk in data
accessibility
49
Tokenization Research
Tokenization Gets Traction
Aberdeen has seen a steady increase in enterprise use of tokenization for protecting sensitive data over encryption
Nearly half of the respondents (47%) are currently using tokenization for something other than cardholder data
Tokenization users had 50% fewer security-related incidents than tokenization non-users
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Source: http://www.protegrity.com/2012/08/tokenization-gets-traction-from-aberdeen/
Security of Different Protection Methods
High
Security Level
I
Format
Preserving
Encryption
I
Vaultless
Data
Tokenization
I
AES CBC
Encryption
Standard
I
Basic
Data
Tokenization
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Low
Fine Grained Data Security Methods
Tokenization and Encryption are Different
Used Approach Cipher System Code System
Cryptographic algorithms
Cryptographic keys
TokenizationEncryption
52
Cryptographic keys
Code books
Index tokens
Source: McGraw-HILL ENCYPLOPEDIA OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
10 000 000 -
1 000 000 -
100 000 -
10 000 -
Transactions per second*
Speed of Different Protection Methods
10 000 -
1 000 -
100 -I
Format
Preserving
Encryption
I
Vaultless
Data
Tokenization
I
AES CBC
Encryption
Standard
I
Vault-based
Data
Tokenization
*: Speed will depend on the configuration
53
Different Tokenization Approaches
Property Dynamic Pre-generated Vaultless
Vault-based
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Use
Case
How Should I Secure Different Data?
Simple –PCI
PII
Encryption
of Files
CardHolder Data
Tokenization of Fields
Personally Identifiable Information
Type of
DataI
Structured
I
Un-structured
Complex – PHI
ProtectedHealth
Information
55
Personally Identifiable Information
Use Big Data to Analyze Abnormal Usage Pattern
Payment CardTerminal
Point Of Sale Application
Memory Scraping Malware
Authorization,Settlement
…
Web Server
Memory Scraping Malware
Moscow, Russia
FireEye
Malware?
Trend - Open Security Analytics Frameworks
57 Source: Emc.com/collateral/white-paper/h12878-rsa-pivotal-security-big-data-reference-architecture
Enterprise Big Data Lake
ConclusionsChanging threat landscape & challenges to secure da ta:
• Attackers are looking for not just payment data – a more serious problem.
• IDS systems are lacking context needed to catch data theft
• SIEM detection is too slow in handling large amounts of events.
What happened at Target ?• Modern customized malware can be very hard to detect
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• They were compliant, but not secure
How can we prevent what happened to Target and the next attack against our sensitive data?
• Assume that we are under attack - proactive protection of the data itself
• We need to analyze event information and context to catch modern attackers
• The Oracle Big Data Appliance can provide the foundation for solving this problem
Thank you!Thank you!
Questions?
Please contact us for more information
http://www.protegrity.com/news-resources/collateral/