The Top 10, Top Predictions for 2012
Around this time of year, almost everyone and their brother put out their annual predictions for the coming year. So instead of coming up with my own, I figured I’d simply regurgitate what many others are expecting to happen. Security Predictions 2012 & 2013 - The Emerging Security Threat – SANS talks Custom Malware, IPv6, ARM hacking and Social Media. Top 7 Cybersecurity Predictions for 2012 - From Stuxnet to Sony, a number of cyberattacks emerged in 2011 that experts have predicted for quite some time. Webroot’s top seven forecasts for the year ahead. Zero-day targets and smartphones are on this list. Top 8 Security Predictions for 2012 – Fortinet’s Security Predictions for 2012. Sponsored attacks and SCADA Under the Scope. Security Predictions for 2012 - With all of the crazy 2011 security breaches, exploits and notorious hacks, what can we expect for 2012? Websense looks at blended attacks, social media identity and SSL. Top 5 Security Predictions For 2012 – The escalating change in the threat landscape is something that drives the need for comprehensive security ever-forward. Firewalls and regulations in this one. Gartner Predicts 2012 – Special report addressing the continuing trend toward the reduction of control IT has over the forces that affect it. Cloud, mobile, data management and context-aware computing. 2012 Cyber Security Predictions – Predicts cybercriminals will use cyber-antics during the U.S. presidential election and will turn cell phones into ATMs. Top Nine Cyber Security Trends for 2012 – Imperva’s predictions for the top cyber security trends for 2012. DDoS, HTML 5 and social media. Internet Predictions for 2012 – QR codes and Flash TOP 15 Internet Marketing Predictions for 2012 – Mobile SEO, Social Media ROI and location based marketing. Certainly not an exhaustive list of all the various 2012 predictions including the doomsday and non-doomsday claims but a good swath of what the experts believe is coming. Wonder if anyone predicted that Targeted attacks increased four-fold in 2011. ps Technorati Tags: F5, cyber security, predictions, 2012, Pete Silva, security, mobile, vulnerabilities, crime, social media, hacks, the tube, internet, identity theft4.7KViews0likes1CommentSANS 20 Critical Security Controls
A couple days ago, The SANS Institute announced the release of a major update (Version 3.0) to the 20 Critical Controls, a prioritized baseline of information security measures designed to provide continuous monitoring to better protect government and commercial computers and networks from cyber attacks. The information security threat landscape is always changing, especially this year with the well publicized breaches. The particular controls have been tested and provide an effective solution to defending against cyber-attacks. The focus is critical technical areas than can help an organization prioritize efforts to protect against the most common and dangerous attacks. Automating security controls is another key area, to help gauge and improve the security posture of an organization. The update takes into account the information gleaned from law enforcement agencies, forensics experts and penetration testers who have analyzed the various methods of attack. SANS outlines the controls that would have prevented those attacks from being successful. Version 3.0 was developed to take the control framework to the next level. They have realigned the 20 controls and the associated sub-controls based on the current technology and threat environment, including the new threat vectors. Sub-controls have been added to assist with rapid detection and prevention of attacks. The 20 Controls have been aligned to the NSA’s Associated Manageable Network Plan Revision 2.0 Milestones. They have added definitions, guidelines and proposed scoring criteria to evaluate tools for their ability to satisfy the requirements of each of the 20 Controls. Lastly, they have mapped the findings of the Australian Government Department of Defence, which produced the Top 35 Key Mitigation Strategies, to the 20 Controls, providing measures to help reduce the impact of attacks. The 20 Critical Security Controls are: Inventory of Authorized and Unauthorized Devices Inventory of Authorized and Unauthorized Software Secure Configurations for Hardware and Software on Laptops, Workstations, and Servers Secure Configurations for Network Devices such as Firewalls, Routers, and Switches Boundary Defense Maintenance, Monitoring, and Analysis of Security Audit Logs Application Software Security Controlled Use of Administrative Privileges Controlled Access Based on the Need to Know Continuous Vulnerability Assessment and Remediation Account Monitoring and Control Malware Defenses Limitation and Control of Network Ports, Protocols, and Services Wireless Device Control Data Loss Prevention Secure Network Engineering Penetration Tests and Red Team Exercises Incident Response Capability Data Recovery Capability Security Skills Assessment and Appropriate Training to Fill Gaps And of course, F5 has solutions that can help with most, if not all, the 20 Critical Controls. ps Resources: SANS 20 Critical Controls Top 35 Mitigation Strategies: DSD Defence Signals Directorate NSA Manageable Network Plan (pdf) Internet Storm Center Google Report: How Web Attackers Evade Malware Detection F5 Security Solutions1.2KViews0likes0CommentsWould you risk $31,000 for milliseconds of application response time?
Keep in mind that the time it takes a human being to blink is an average of 300 – 400 milliseconds. I just got back from Houston where I helped present on F5’s integration with web application security vendor White Hat, a.k.a. virtual patching. As almost always happens whenever anyone mentions the term web application firewall the question of performance degradation was raised. To be precise: How much will a web application firewall degrade performance? Not will it, but how much will it, degrade performance. My question back to those of you with the same question is, “How much are you willing to accept to mitigate the risk?” Or perhaps more precisely, how much are your users and customers – and therefore your business - willing to accept to mitigate the risk, because in most cases today that’s really who is the target and thus bearing the risk of today’s web application attacks. As Jeremiah Grossman often points out, mass SQL injection and XSS attacks are not designed to expose your data, they’re designed today to exploit your customers and users, by infecting them with malware designed to steal their personal data. So the people who are really bearing the burden of risk when browsing your site are your customers and users. It’s their risk we’re playing with more than our own. So they question has to be asked with them in mind: how much latency are your users and customers willing to accept in order to mitigate the risk of being infected and the potential for becoming the next statistic in one of the many fraud-oriented organizations tracking identity theft? SIX OF ONE, HALF-DOZEN OF THE OTHER No matter where you implement a security strategy that involves the deep inspection of application data you are going to incur latency. If you implement it in code, you’re increasing the amount of time it takes to execute on the server – which increases response time. If you implement it in a web application firewall, you’re increasing the amount of time it takes to get to the server- which will undoubtedly increase response time. The interesting thing is that time is generally measured in milliseconds, and is barely noticeable to the user. It literally happens in the blink of an eye and is only obvious to someone tasked with reporting on application performance, who is used to dealing with network response times that are almost always sub-second. The difference between 2ms and 5ms is not noticeable to the human brain. The impact of this level of latency is almost unnoticeable to the end-user and does not radically affect his or her experience one way or another. Even 10ms – or 100 ms - is still sub-second latency and is not noticeable unless it appears on a detailed application performance report. But let’s say that a web application firewall did increase latency to a noticeable degree. Let’s say it added 2 seconds to the overall response time. Would the user notice? Perhaps. The question then becomes, are they willing to accept that in exchange for better protection against malicious code? Are they willing to accept that in exchange for not becoming the next victim of identity theft due to malicious code that was inserted into your database via an SQL injection attack and delivered to them the next time they visited your site? Are they willing to accept 5 seconds? 10 seconds? Probably not (I wouldn’t either), but what did they say? If you can’t answer it’s probably because you haven’t asked. That’s okay, because no one has to my knowledge. It’s not a subject we freely discuss with customers because we assume they are, for the most part, ignorant of the very risks associated with just visiting our sites. THE MYTH OF SUB-SECOND LATENCY Too, we often forget that sub-second latency does not really matter in a world served up by the Internet. We’re hard-wired to the application via the LAN and expect it to instantly appear on our screens the moment we try to access it or hit “submit”. We forget that in the variable, crazy world of the Internet the user is often subjected to a myriad events of which they are blissfully unaware that affect the performance of our sites and applications. They do not expect sub-second response times because experience tells them it’s going to vary from day to day and hour to hour and much of the reasons for it are out of their – and our – control. Do we want the absolute best performance for our customers and users? Yes. But not necessarily at the risk of leaving them – and our data – exposed. If we were really worried about performance we’d get rid of all the firewalls and content scanners and A/V gateways and IPS and IDS and just deliver applications raw across the Internet, the way nature intended them to be delivered: naked and bereft of all protection. But they’d be damned fast, wouldn’t they? We don’t do that, of course, because we aren’t fruitcakes. We’ve weighed the benefits of the protection afforded by such systems against the inherent latency incurred by the solutions and decided that the benefits outweighed the risk. We need to do the same thing with web application firewalls and really any security solution that needs to sit between the application and the user; we need to weigh the risk against the benefit. We first need to really understand what the risks are for us and our customers, and then make a decision how to address that risk – either by ignoring it or mitigating it. But we need to stop fooling ourselves into discarding possible solutions for what is almost always a non-issue. We may think our customers or users will raise hell if the response time of their favorite site or application increases by 5 or 50 or even 500 ms, but will they really? Will they really even notice it? And if we asked them, would they accept it in exchange for better protection against identity theft? Against viruses and worms? Against key-loggers and the cost of a trip to the hospital when their mother has a heart-attack because she happened to look over as three hundred pop-ups filled with porn images filled their screen because they were infected with malware by your site? We need to start considering not only the risk to our own organizations and the customer data we must protect, but to our customers’ and users’ environments, and then evaluate solutions that are going to effectively address that risk in a way that satisfies everyone. To do that, we need to involve the customer and the business more in that decision making process and stop focusing only on the technical aspects of how much latency might be involved or whether we like the technology or not. Go ahead. Ask your customers and users if they’re willing to risk $31,000 – the estimated cost of identity theft today to an individual – to save 500 milliseconds of response time. And when they ask how long that is, tell them the truth, “about the time it takes to blink an eye”. As potentially one of your customers or visitors, I’ll start out your data set by saying, “No. No, I’m not.”499Views0likes1CommentFedRAMP Federates Further
FedRAMP (Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program), the government’s cloud security assessment plan, announced late last week that Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the first agency-approved cloud service provider. The accreditation covers all AWS data centers in the United States. Amazon becomes the third vendor to meet the security requirements detailed by FedRAMP. FedRAMP is the result of the US Government’s work to address security concerns related to the growing practice of cloud computing and establishes a standardized approach to security assessment, authorizations and continuous monitoring for cloud services and products. By creating industry-wide security standards and focusing more on risk management, as opposed to strict compliance with reporting metrics, officials expect to improve data security as well as simplify the processes agencies use to purchase cloud services. FedRAMP is looking toward full operational capability later this year. As both the cloud and the government’s use of cloud services grow, officials found that there were many inconsistencies to requirements and approaches as each agency began to adopt the cloud. Launched in 2012, FedRAMP’s goal is to bring consistency to the process but also give cloud vendors a standard way of providing services to the government. And with the government’s cloud-first policy, which requires agencies to consider moving applications to the cloud as a first option for new IT projects, this should streamline the process of deploying to the cloud. This is an ‘approve once, and use many’ approach, reducing the cost and time required to conduct redundant, individual agency security assessment. AWS's certification is for 3 years. FedRAMP provides an overall checklist for handling risks associated with Web services that would have a limited, or serious impact on government operations if disrupted. Cloud providers must implement these security controls to be authorized to provide cloud services to federal agencies. The government will forbid federal agencies from using a cloud service provider unless the vendor can prove that a FedRAMP-accredited third-party organization has verified and validated the security controls. Once approved, the cloud vendor would not need to be ‘re-evaluated’ by every government entity that might be interested in their solution. There may be instances where additional controls are added by agencies to address specific needs. The BIG-IP Virtual Edition for AWS includes options for traffic management, global server load balancing, application firewall, web application acceleration, and other advanced application delivery functions. ps Related: Cloud Security With FedRAMP FedRAMP Ramps Up FedRAMP achieves another cloud security milestone Amazon wins key cloud security clearance from government Cloud Security With FedRAMP CLOUD SECURITY ACCREDITATION PROGRAM TAKES FLIGHT FedRAMP comes fraught with challenges F5 iApp template for NIST Special Publication 800-53 Now Playing on Amazon AWS - BIG-IP Connecting Clouds as Easy as 1-2-3 F5 Gives Enterprises Superior Application Control with BIG-IP Solutions for Amazon Web Services Technorati Tags: f5,fedramp,government,cloud,service providers,risk,standards,silva,compliance,cloud security,aws,amazon Connect with Peter: Connect with F5:419Views0likes0CommentsComplying with PCI DSS–Part 3: Maintain a Vulnerability Management Program
According to the PCI SSC, there are 12 PCI DSS requirements that satisfy a variety of security goals. Areas of focus include building and maintaining a secure network, protecting stored cardholder data, maintaining a vulnerability management program, implementing strong access control measures, regularly monitoring and testing networks, and maintaining information security policies. The essential framework of the PCI DSS encompasses assessment, remediation, and reporting. We’re exploring how F5 can help organizations gain or maintain compliance and today is Maintain a Vulnerability Management Program which includes PCI Requirements 5 and 6. To read Part 1, click: Complying with PCI DSS–Part 1: Build and Maintain a Secure Network and Part 2: Complying with PCI DSS–Part 2: Protect Cardholder Data Requirement 5: Use and regularly update antivirus software or programs. PCI DSS Quick Reference Guide description: Vulnerability management is the process of systematically and continuously finding weaknesses in an entity’s payment card infrastructure system. This includes security procedures, system design, implementation, or internal controls that could be exploited to violate system security policy. Solution: With BIG-IP APM and BIG-IP Edge Gateway, F5 provides the ability to scan any remote device or internal system to ensure that an updated antivirus package is running prior to permitting a connection to the network. Once connections are made, BIG-IP APM and BIG-IP Edge Gateway continually monitor the user connections for a vulnerable state change, and if one is detected, can quarantine the user on the fly into a safe, secure, and isolated network. Remediation services can include a URL redirect to an antivirus update server. For application servers in the data center, BIG-IP products can communicate with existing network security and monitoring tools. If an application server is found to be vulnerable or compromised, that device can be automatically quarantined or removed from the service pool. With BIG-IP ASM, file uploads can be extracted from requests and transferred over iCAP to a central antivirus (AV) scanner. If a file infection is detected, BIG-IP ASM will drop that request, making sure the file doesn’t reach the web server. Requirement 6: Develop and maintain secure systems and applications. PCI DSS Quick Reference Guide description: Security vulnerabilities in systems and applications may allow criminals to access PAN and other cardholder data. Many of these vulnerabilities are eliminated by installing vendor-provided security patches, which perform a quick-repair job for a specific piece of programming code. All critical systems must have the most recently released software patches to prevent exploitation. Entities should apply patches to less-critical systems as soon as possible, based on a risk-based vulnerability management program. Secure coding practices for developing applications, change control procedures, and other secure software development practices should always be followed. Solution: Requirements 6.1 through 6.5 deal with secure coding and application development; risk analysis, assessment, and mitigation; patching; and change control. Requirement 6.6 states: “Ensure all public-facing web applications are protected against known attacks, either by performing code vulnerability reviews at least annually or by installing a web application firewall in front of public-facing web applications.” This requirement can be easily met with BIG-IP ASM, which is a leading web application firewall (WAF) offering protection for vulnerable web applications. Using both a positive security model for dynamic application protection and a strong, signature-based negative security model, BIG-IP ASM provides application-layer protection against both targeted and generalized application attacks. It also protects against the Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) Top Ten vulnerabilities and threats on the Web Application Security Consortium’s (WASC) Threat Classification lists. To assess a web application’s vulnerability, most organizations turn to a vulnerability scanner. The scanning schedule might depend on a change in control, as when an application is initially being deployed, or other triggers such as a quarterly report. The vulnerability scanner scours the web application, and in some cases actually attempts potential attacks, to generate a report indicating all possible vulnerabilities. This gives the administrator managing the web security devices a clear view of all exposed areas and potential threats to the website. Such a report is a moment-in time assessment and might not result in full application coverage, but should give administrators a clear picture of their web application security posture. It includes information about coding errors, weak authentication mechanisms, fields or parameters that query the database directly, or other vulnerabilities that provide unauthorized access to information, sensitive or not. Otherwise, many of these vulnerabilities would need to be manually re-coded or manually added to the WAF policy—both expensive undertakings. Simply having the vulnerability report, while beneficial, doesn’t make a web application secure. The real value of the report lies in how it enables an organization to determine the risk level and how best to mitigate the risk. Since recoding an application is expensive and time-consuming and may generate even more errors, many organizations deploy a WAF like BIG-IP ASM. A WAF enables an organization to protect its web applications by virtually patching the open vulnerabilities until developers have an opportunity to properly close the hole. Often, organizations use the vulnerability scanner report to either tighten or initially generate a WAF policy. While finding vulnerabilities helps organizations understand their exposure, they must also have the ability to quickly mitigate those vulnerabilities to greatly reduce the risk of application exploits. The longer an application remains vulnerable, the more likely it is to be compromised. For cloud deployments, BIG-IP ASM Virtual Edition (VE) delivers the same functionality as the physical edition and helps companies maintain compliance, including compliance with PCI DSS, when they deploy applications in the cloud. If an application vulnerability is discovered, BIG-IP ASM VE can quickly be deployed in a cloud environment, enabling organizations to immediately patch vulnerabilities virtually until the development team can permanently fix the application. Additionally, organizations are often unable to fix applications developed by third parties, and this lack of control prevents many of them from considering cloud deployments. But with BIG-IP ASM VE, organizations have full control over securing their cloud infrastructure. BIG-IP ASM version 11.1 includes integration with IBM Rational AppScan, Cenzic Hailstorm, QualysGuard WAS, and WhiteHat Sentinel, making BIG-IP ASM the most advanced vulnerability assessment and application protection on the market. In addition, administrators can better create and enforce policies with information about attack patterns from a grouping of violations or otherwise correlated incidents. In this way, BIG-IP ASM protects the applications between scanning and patching cycles and against zero-day attacks that signature-based scanners won’t find. Both are critical in creating a secure Application Delivery Network. BIG-IP ASM also makes it easy to understand where organizations stand relative to PCI DSS compliance. With the BIG-IP ASM PCI Compliance Report, organizations can quickly see each security measure required to comply with PCI DSS 2.0 and understand which measures are or are not relevant to BIG-IP ASM functions. For relevant security measures, the report indicates whether the organization’s BIG-IP ASM appliance complies with PCI DSS 2.0. For security measures that are not relevant to BIG-IP ASM, the report explains what action to take to achieve PCI DSS 2.0 compliance. BIG-IP ASM PCI Compliance Report Finally, with the unique F5 iHealth system, organizations can analyze the configuration of their BIG-IP products to identify any critical patches or security updates that may be necessary. Next: Implement Strong Access Control Measures ps413Views0likes1CommentInfographic: Protect Yourself Against Cybercrime
Maybe I’ll start doing an ‘Infographic Friday’ to go along with Lori’s F5 Friday. This one comes to us from Rasmussen College's School of Technology and Design Cyber Security Program and shows the online risks and offers some good tips on how to better protect your computer and avoid being a victim of cybercrime. ps399Views0likes0CommentsWill the Cloud Soak Your Fireworks?
This week in the States, the Nation celebrates it's Independence and many people will be attending or setting off their own fireworks show. In Hawaii, fireworks are shot off more during New Year's Eve than on July 4th and there is even Daytime Fireworks now. Cloud computing is exploding like fireworks with all the Oooooooo's and Ahhhhhhh's of what it offers but the same groan, like the traffic jam home, might be coming to an office near you. Recently, Ponemon Institute and cloud firm Netskope released a study Data Breach: The Cloud Multiplier Effect, indicating that 613 IT and security professionals felt that deploying resources in the cloud triples the probability of a major breach. Specifically, a data breach with 100,000+ customer records compromised, the cost would be just over $20 million, based on Ponemon Institute’s May 2014 'Cost of a Data Breach'. With a breach of that scale, using cloud services may triple the risk of a data breach. It's called the 'cloud multiplier effect' and it translates to a 3% higher risk of a data breach for every 1% increase in the use of cloud services. So if you had 100 cloud services, you would only need to add 25 more to increase the possibility of a data breach by 75%, according to the study. 69% of the respondents felt that their organizations are not proactive in assessing what data is too sensitive to be stored in the cloud and 62% said that the cloud services their companies are using are not fully tested to make sure they are secure. Most, almost three-quarters, believed they would not even be notified of a breach that involved lost or stolen intellectual property/business confidential or even customer data. Not a lot of confidence there. The security respondents felt around 45% of all software applications used by the company were cloud based yet half of those had no IT visibility. This comes at a time when many organizations are looking to the cloud to solve a bunch of challenges. At the same time, this sounds a lot like the cloud concerns of year's past - security and risk - plus this is the perception of...not necessarily the reality of what's actually occurring. It very well could be the case - with all the parts, loss of control, out in the wild, etc - that the risk is greater. And I think that's the point. The risk. While cloud does offer organizations amazing opportunities, what these people are saying is that companies need to do a better job at the onset, in the beginning and during the evaluations, to understand the risk of the type(s) of data getting sent to the cloud along with the specific cloud service that holds it. It has only been a few years that the cloud has been taken seriously and from the beginning there have been grumblings about the security risks and loss of control. Some cloud providers have addressed many of those concerns and organizations are subscribing to services or building their own cloud infrastructure. It is where IT is going. But still,as with any new technology bursting with light, color and noise, take good care where and when you light the fuse. ps Related Cloud computing triples probability of major data breach: survey Cloud Could Triple Odds of $20M Data Breach Cloud Triples A Firm’s Probability of Data Breach The future of cloud is hybrid ... and seamless CloudExpo 2014: Future of the Cloud Surfing the Surveys: Cloud, Security and those Pesky Breaches Cloud Bursting Reference Architecture Technorati Tags: f5,cloud,security,risk,silva,survey,breach,fireworks,july 4 Connect with Peter: Connect with F5:343Views0likes0CommentsQ. The Safest Mobile Device? A. Depends
Depends?!? Well, isn't that the answer to a lot of things in this world? Often our answer depends on the context of the question. Sometimes the answer depends on who you ask since it may only be an opinion or a feeling. Sometimes the answer is based on a survey, which is a moment in time, and might change a day later. I write a lot about secure mobile access, especially to the enterprise, so I'm obviously interested in any stories about the risks of mobile devices. There were a couple over the last few weeks that really caught my attention since they seemed to completely contradict each other. Earlier in the month, SC Magazine had a story titled, RSA 2013: iOS safer than Android due to open app model, patching delays which covered much of what many already feel - due to Apple's controlled ecosystem, the apps that are available are less of a risk to a user. They made note of the McAfee Threats Report which says Android malware almost doubled from the 2nd to 3rd quarter of 2012. Then just last week, also from SC Magazine, an article titled, Study finds iOS apps to be riskier than Android appeared. What? Wait, I thought they were safer. Well, no apparently. But before I go any further, I do need to mention that the author of both articles, Marcos Colon (@turbomarcos) does reference his first article and says, 'Security concerns surrounding the Android platform have always taken a back seat to that of iOS, but a new study challenges that notion,' so slack has been extended. :-) Anyway, according to an Appthorityreport, iOS apps pose a greater risk and has more privacy issues (to users) than Android. Appthority's 'App Reputation Report' looked at 50 of the top free apps available on both platforms and investigated how their functionality affects user privacy. They looked for “risky” app etiquette like sending data without encryption, sharing information with 3rd-parties, and gaining access to the users' calendars. (Chart) In this particular study, in almost all the cases, iOS gave access to the most info. Of the 50 apps, all of them (100%) sent unencrypted data via iOS but 'only' 92% sent clear text on Android. Tracking user location: 60% on iOS verses 42% on Android. Sharing user data with third-parties: 60% on iOS verses 50% on Android. When it comes to accessing the user's contacts, something we really do not like, 54% of iOS apps accessed the contact list compared to only 20% on Android. One of biggest differences, according to the article, is that at least on Andriod users are presented with a list of content the app wants to hook and the user can decide - on iOS, permissions can be changed once the app is installed. To claim one device is either 'safer,' or 'riskier' is somewhat a moot point these days. Any time you put your entire life on a device and then rely on that device to run your life, there is risk. Any time we freely offer up private information, there is a risk. Any time we rely on others to protect our privacy and provide security, there is a risk. Any time we allow apps access to personal information, there is risk. But like any potential vulnerability, individuals and organizations alike, need to understand the potential risk and determine if it something they can live with. Security is risk management. To top all this off and really what made me write this, was an @GuyKawasaki tweet titled Love Logo Swaps and among the many twists on brands, was this one: And it all made sense. ps Related: RSA 2013: iOS safer than Android due to open app model, patching delays Study finds iOS apps to be riskier than Android Smartphone hacking comes of age, hitting US victims 6 Steps To Address BYOD: A Security Management Roadmap 10 Awesome Logo Swaps Inside Look - F5 Mobile App Manager Is BYO Already D? Will BYOL Cripple BYOD? Freedom vs. Control BYOD–The Hottest Trend or Just the Hottest Term BYOD 2.0 – Moving Beyond MDM with F5 Mobile App Manager Technorati Tags: mobile device,smartphone,ios,android,privacy,safety,security,silva,byod,mam,f5,risk Connect with Peter: Connect with F5:341Views0likes0CommentsInvasion of Privacy - Mobile App Infographic Style
Couple blogs/weeks ago, I posted What’s in Your Smartphone? covering the recent Nielsen report, State of the Appnation – A Year of Change and Growth in U.S. Smartphones. According to the study, 70% (last year) and 73% (this year) expressed concern over personal data collection and 55% were cautious about sharing location info via smartphone apps so, obviously, it is important that users are aware of the risks they face when downloading and using apps. So it is perfect timing that I came across Veracode’s infographic showing real world cases to outline the threat to user privacy posed by mobile apps. Infographic by Veracode Application Security Fascinating and scary at the same time. ps References: How Mobile Apps are Invading Your Privacy Infographic Infographic: How Mobile Apps Invade Your Privacy State of the Appnation – A Year of Change and Growth in U.S. Smartphones Nielsen: 1 in 2 own a smartphone, average 41 apps Freedom vs. Control BYOD–The Hottest Trend or Just the Hottest Term Hey You, Get Off-ah My Cloud! Evolving (or not) with Our Devices The New Wallet: Is it Dumb to Carry a Smartphone? BYOD Is Driving IT ‘Crazy,’ Gartner Says Consumerization trend driving IT shops 'crazy,' Gartner analyst says296Views0likes0CommentsBlog Roll 2011
It’s that time of year when we gift and re-gift. And the perfect opportunity to re-post, re-purpose and re-use my 2011 blog entries. If you missed any of the approximately 50 blogs, 11 audio whitepapers or 47 videos, here they are wrapped in one simple entry. I read somewhere that lists in blogs are good. Have a Safe and Happy New Year. F5 Security Vignette Series 2012 IT Staffing Crisis? The Top 10, Top Predictions for 2012 Pearl Harbor, Punchbowl and my Grandparents Cloud Copyright, Capital and The Courts A Blog of Thanks Dynamic Attack Protection and Access Control with BIG-IP v11 F5 BIG-IP Platform Security F5 International Technology Center Video Tour When Personal Security is Compromised London IPEXPO 2011 - The Wrap Up London IPEXPO 2011 F5 EMEA Our Identity Crisis Oracle OpenWorld 2011: The Video Outtakes Oracle OpenWorld 2011: The Wrap Up Oracle OpenWorld 2011: Interview with F5’s Ron Carovano Oracle OpenWorld 2011: Interview with F5's Keith Gillum Oracle OpenWorld 2011: Interview with F5’s Calvin Rowland Oracle OpenWorld 2011: BIG-IP ASM & Oracle Database Firewall Oracle OpenWorld 2011: Interview with F5's Andy Oehler Oracle OpenWorld 2011: F5 ARX & Oracle ZFS Storage Oracle OpenWorld 2011: BIG-IP WANOp & Oracle GoldenGate Oracle OpenWorld 2011 - Aloha:Find F5 Booth 1527 IPS or WAF Dilemma VMworld 2011: F5 BIG-IP v11 iApps for Citrix F5 Case Study: WhiteHat Security Cloud Computing Making Waves Hackers Hit Vacation Spots From the Greenroom VMworld 2011: The Video Outtakes VMworld 2011: VMworld Wrap Up VMworld 2011: VMworld Hands-On Lab VMworld 2011: Interview with Ron Carovano VMworld 2011: Multi-Site Application Deployment with vSphere & vCloud Director VMworld 2011: VDI Single Namespace VMworld 2011: Interview with VMware’s Sanjay Aiyagari VMworld 2011: Sign Up for F5's DevCentral VMworld 2011: Find F5 Networks Audio White Paper - High-Performance DNS Services in BIG-IP Version 11 SANS 20 Critical Security Controls The STAR of Cloud Security Audio White Paper - Application Security in the Cloud with BIG-IP ASM DNSSEC: Is Your Infrastructure Ready? Security Never Takes a Vacation Dynamic Application Control and Attack Protection The Best of…Me Protection from Latest Network and Application Attacks IT Security: Mid-Year Gut Check Audio White Paper - Controlling Migration to IPv6: A Gateway to Tomorrow The Land of a Thousand Twist-Ties Cure Your Big App Attack Drive Identity Into Your Network with F5 Access Solutions Custom Code for Targeted Attacks Audio White Paper - The F5 Dynamic Services Model Who In The World Are You? And The Hits Keep Coming Ixia Xcellon-Ultra XT-80 validates F5 Network's VIPRION 2400 SSL Performance Audio White Paper - Application and Data Security with F5 BIG-IP ASM and Oracle Database Firewall Interop 2011 - TMCNet Interview It’s Show Time Interop 2011 - The Video Outtakes Interop 2011 - Wrapping It Up Interop 2011 - F5 in the Interop NOC Follow Up Interop 2011 - IXIA and VIPRION 2400 Performance Test Interop 2011 - VIPRION 2400 and vCMP EMC World 2011 - ARX Hybrid-Cloud Demo Interop 2011 - F5 in the Interop NOC Interop 2011 - Find F5 Networks Booth 2027 Lost Your Balance? Drop The Load and Deliver! Unplug Everything! Do You Splunk 2.0 Technology Can Only Do So Much 3 Billion Malware Attacks and Counting In 5 Minutes or Less - Enterprise Manager v2.2 The Big Attacks are Back…Not That They Ever Stopped Has The Sky Cleared on Cloud Security? Audio White Paper - Streamlining Oracle Web Application Access Control Defense in Depth in Context Our Digital Life Deciphered Where Do You Wear Your Malware? RSA 2011 Wrap and Blooper Reel RSA2011 F5 Partner Spotlight–NitroSecurity RSA2011 F5 Partner Spotlight - Q1 Labs RSA2011 - Interview with Jeremiah Grossman RSA2011 - BIG-IP Edge Client on iPad RSA2011 F5 Partner Spotlight - PhoneFactor RSA2011 F5 Partner Spotlight - OPSWAT RSA2011 - Welcome to San Francisco On The Way to RSA A Digital Poltergeist On Your Television Identity Theft: Good News-Bad News Edition Radio Killed the Privacy Star Audio White Paper: Achieving Enterprise Agility in the Cloud In 5 Minutes or Less Video Series Audio White Paper: Optimizing Application Delivery in Support of Data Center Consolidation Simplify VMware View Deployments In 5 Minutes or Less Video - BIG-IP APM & Citrix XenApp Audio White Paper: F5 BIG-IP WAN Optimization Module in Data Replication Environments The New Wallet: Is it Dumb to Carry a Smartphone? iDo Declare: iPhone with BIG-IP Audio Tech Brief - Secure iPhone Access to Corporate Web Applications PCI Turns 2.0 In 5 Minutes or Less Video - F5's iHealth System Audio White Paper - Application Delivery Hardware A Critical Component And a couple special holiday themed entries from years past. e-card Malware X marks the Games ps Technorati Tags: blog, social media, 2011, f5, statistics, big-ip, web traffic, digital media, mobile device, analytics, video291Views0likes0Comments