2009

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Last week I helped hold the Panda Security Days seminar tour and had a smaller appearance myself. It was fun, but it left me very tired. One small whisky put me to sleep last Friday ;)

I’ll post some pictures later on tonight (or tomorrow) both here and on our swedish Panda Security blog (blogg.pandasecurity.se) together with some additional info.

Right now I’m at the airport (Bromma) waiting for a flight to Umeå where I will help a partner present our solutions to a possible client, and the calendar for the rest of the week looks like a car wreck…

It’ll work out though, and it’s nice to have something to do that I actually enjoy. No recession here for sure :9

Cheers,

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Today I’m visiting Cybercrime Security Forum 2009 with Andy Malone. I found an agenda in english here, but it does not correspond 100% to the swedish one that I’ve got.

Looking forward to two days of hopefully new knowledge or new point of views…


“All in all”-recap

I had the wrong expectations going into this event, thinking it would be more hands on, real world tests, active examples of tool usage etc. There was some, but not of the sort I expected. That dropped me a bit the first day and made me a bit unhappy.

However, the second day remedied almost all of the problems I had with the first one. For example the issue of legislative questions was cleared up, and all other questions of scope was handled. This was good for me as I could switch my brain from hackermode to managementmode, which was the state I should have been in from the beginning in order to gain as much as possible from the sessions.

It is also important to recognize the value of the information provided. Not many people bring the traditional issues up on the table anymore, just because they’re not hot anymore. You usually get stuffed with SQL injections, XSS, CSRF and other “web 2.0″ hax at a lot of seminars, but those are really very secondary to a Cisco router with an open SNMP implementation.

This situation makes it harder for people new to the securityworld (managers dropped into a security role for example) to get hold of the basics, and seminars like these are the ones that get them up to speed.

William Matthey had a slide showing all the layers and possible attack vectors in all of them that illustrated this quite clearly.

When summarizing the event for myself, I’m not regretting my attendance. I am however, regretting the mode I was in entering the event. It covers the whole big picture, and some finer details, but it’s not a hands on hacking event.




UPDATE (after day one):

Actually a bit dissapointed so far. 50% of the lectures have been good and 50% not good at all. Some things are presented as facts even though there aren’t any and it feels a bit like fearmongering.

For example, one fact presented was that it would be against the law (as in legislation) for us in Europe to store data on US-owned computersystems… emmm.. goodbye globalization? Goodbye SalesForce? Goodbye Google? It just doesn’t feel right hearing this from people sitting on more certifications than I can memorize… I might have misunderstood so if any of the lecturers would like to comment on that statement it would be nice.

Some of the time the networking details and hacking methods also feel a little bit outdated. I expected to learn something new, but it aint happening. I’m guessing you have to adapt to a varying level of expertise in the audience, but come on… I want SQL Injections, mapping of botnets, details of current threats etc… Not references to Netbus (plz, if removing or replacing something, remove that one!).

I get very frustrated when things turn this way as it clouds out all the good things that’s being delivered.

Andy Malone is a very good presenter though, even when his Microsoft MVP status shines through from time to time, and I appreciate his presentation style. Clear and to the point.

I enjoyed Andy M’s physical hacking info the most, as that’s where I have the least experience. Not very often you break into buildings, hehe… but more seriously that might come in handy if doing bigger audits in the future.

During the seminars he also had some illustrative video clips that broke off the “Death by Powerpoint”-syndrome. I’m probably going to “steal” that trick for some of my future seminars.

As all nerds/semi-nerds I also appreciated the wide array of gadgets he seems to carry ;) I mean, a camera pen, what’s not to love about it?

Hoping for a day 2 with less to whine about ;)

UPDATE (day 2 in progress):

This day has started out better with a great seminar by Andy Malone called “Defense against the dark arts!”. He passed over some physical security stuff, IDS’s, IPS’s and HIPS’s and other local and remote protection mechanisms and tools. This too felt a little MS-ified at times, but the overall level of the information was good.

[...]

All other sessions was good, and William Matthey had one called “The invisible network” about wireless networks and their inherent vulnerabilities. Actually made me a bit uncomfortable as I remembered an old firewall rule I’ve left in a place it shouldn’t have been. Fixed now though, hehe.

The afternoon session with Andy Malone was also interesting and he touched on many subjects. Among them the CIA triad (what it is, how to use and look at it) and tools that can be used to help secure your environment. The one that was the most interesting and new for me was the latest version of MSAT (version 4.x), that helps you to assess your overall risk exposure. Might not sound very interesting to some, but I’m going to do a testrun first thing tomorrow morning in our test environment.

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All was well at IT-SecurityWorld and I got a chance to say hi to Patrik Fältström at the end of the day. That was nice even though he gave me (and Panda ;) ) a small kick for not being IPv6 ready with our services. I have a feeling that we’re not alone though and all the points he keep making in the seminars I’ve seen him hold has always been very valid. People need to begin make the shift and stop being so comfortable as soon as possible.

In other news, the European parliament is about to vote on the Medina Report, which is going to set the direction for all future IP-rights enforcement work. It suggests, among other things, censorship of uncomfortable sites and traffic throttling. It also names The Pirate Bay as a primary target and this has not been well recieved here in Sweden as it can be considered interfering with an ongoing investigation and trial.

Not very nice. More information about this report and it’s ramifications can be found here:

IPTegrity – A Net dilemma for the European Parliament
IPTegrity – Libraries call to reject Medina report
La Quadrature Du Net – Copyright dogmatism ridiculously strikes the European Parliament

In other “work news” I recieved a request for comment on the surfacing issues of states implementing laws that make it legal for police to hack into computers and plant trojans from Christian Rudolf (Swedish site) over at Mjukvara.se (Swedish site). The question was if we as a security vendor would cooperate with the police in these situations and our position in this matter was summarized nicely internally when we discussed this:

Our position is that we will always detect all trojans to protect our customers, even if they pass a law to make a legal police trojan in Germany or anywhere else. If they take us to court of justice or make any type of pressure to make us whitelist their trojan, we will fight against it.

The americans have a typical phrase that fits well into this situation: “they’ll have to pry the detection signature from our cold, dead hands!”

It’s nice to see Panda Reseach and Labs have a sober view on this. Not that I didn’t expect them to, but the silence from some vendors are speaking for itself. The only ones responding to the inquiry on Mjukvara.se was Panda Security, Symantec and Avast. All of us stating that we would not whitelist any trojans. Ever.

Worth noting though is that there has been some trouble with this earlier with some vendors involving a specialized FBI-trojan called Magic Lantern. Let’s hope that the vendors that ignored this trojan change and follow up on their current promises.

And one last thing, I’m in need of some help from someone that knows virtualization (VmWare or similar). Working on setting up a multiple host, multiple network, multiple function solution and I would like to ask someone that knows more about this than me. So if you’re skilled and feel like giving me some quick A’s to my Q’s, please drop me an e-mail (daniel dot nystrom at icmpecho dot com) or comment on this post!

Cheers,

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Panda Security/work related post. This is a personal blog but from time to time I’m posting things that may relate to my employer. More info, read “About this blog”.
Panda Security - www.pandasecurity.com - www.pcm.se
Tomorrow afternoon I’m holding a shorter live demo on MalwareRadar (a corporate scan-in-the-cloud service from Panda) at IT-SecurityWorld in Kista, Stockholm tomorrow, and I’m going to be there for the whole day. Come by and say hi if you’re attending.

My colleagues Sebastian Zabala and Rickard Uddenberg are also going to make appearances during the day and we’ve coordinated our efforts under the phrases “Antivirus, is it really an effective protection?” and “We don’t trust antivirus, do you?”. It’s going to be fun, heh.

I’m also going to Finland next week to participate in the “Panda Security Days” over there, and I’ll be staying in Tampere for two days. This will also be a good opportunity to handle some administrative issues on-site in our Finnish office, so double niceness. The only downside to this trip apart from having to be away from home is that I’ll miss the next “Pirate” meeting here in Stockholm, but I’ll catch up through our blog (Swedish) and Skype channels.

Cheers,

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So, almost all the main swedish bloggers I’ve seen has started the new year with a bad taste in their mouths, detailing exactly how much of our democracy and integrity we have lost in just one year. I agree with them fully, but it feels wrong to start a new year with a pessimistic approach.

Instead I’m going to start it by sharing some of my wallpapers I’ve created recently, as that’s what the Internet is all about. Sharing! I love French Bulldogs and I think it’s going to shine through a bit, but I threw one in that does not contain one ;) I’ve made them all to 1280×1024 resolution and they are licensed under a Creative Commons BY-NC license. This means that you are free to do whatever you want with them as long as credit is given and that you do not use them commercially.

Flower
Wallpaper 1280x1024

Ruby on a field
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Ruby on another field, vintage style
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Vera, try saying no to these eyes
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Vera sleeping
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Vera with stick, vintage style
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These images has been shot by me and edited in The Gimp (an open source equivalent of Photoshop) and most are laborations with the Lomo-filter and different color curves from elsamuko.

I used Creative Commons licenses to waive some of my rights to the pictures above. If you want to support the great work that Creative Commons are doing, which is to allow an author to say “some rights reserved” instead of “all rights reserved” if he wants to, do so by joining the CC Network.

Also, if youre still longing for some negative news, as the ones I usually post about, head over to Mikael Nordfeldth’s blog and read his thoughts. The ZeroPaid article he’s using as a reference is also worth a read (while you still can)…

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