What Obama's Cybersecurity Plan Means For Businesses
Tuesday, 6 Jan 2009 - 17:08 EDT
Source: By Kelly Jackson Higgins - Dark Reading - New York,NY,USA
Administration's new cybersecurity policies could yield
new security regulations and incentives for enterprises, experts
say
While President Obama was careful to assuage fears of government
overstepping when it comes to privacy and power regarding his new
cybersecurity plans -- the administration will not "dictate
security standards" for private companies, he said on Friday --
security experts say he still left the door open for some form of
regulation that could impact how enterprises secure their systems
and networks.
And that may be the only way to better lock down data.
"There are certain aspects of security that won't be
well-addressed in industry without some kind of regulation,"
says Dave Merkel, vice president of products at Mandiant. The key
is how the regulation is applied, and that it's not too big or
"unwieldy," he says.
Paul Henry,
security and forensic analyst for Lumension Security, says letting
industry regulate itself during the past few years has been a
failure when it comes to security. "I really hate regulation,
but I think a minimum bar needs to be set [by the
government]," Henry says. "It just seems the current
regulation [with PCI, for example] is there to lower the bar and
make it easier to become compliant, and not raise the bar for
security for the masses. I'm personally hoping some form of federal
regulation that levels the playing field comes out of all of
this."
Henry points to PCI taking years to include a firewall
requirement, and then not actually defining an application
firewall: "So you had vendors able to [use] a packet filter,
plug in some signatures, and call it an application firewall,"
he says. And the PCI standards body's recent relaxation of the time
frame for patching from 30 days to using "best practices" is
problematic, Henry says. "A bad guy can reverse-engineer a
[patch] in 24 hours, yet now a PCI organization has 30-plus days to
install that critical patch," he says.
With the feds now focused on better coordinating the security of
their own systems, any new federal rules and regulations are likely
to trickle down to some businesses anyway. "If you do business for
the federal government, the umbrella of FISMA will drop [over] your
head. And if you're owned in part by the federal government, as
some companies are now, you have to be in line with government
standards," says Tom Kellermann, vice president of security
awareness for Core Security Technologies.
Additional compliance legislation could emerge around mandatory
disclosure, too. Andrew Jaquith, senior analyst for Forrester
Research, says the stimulus bill (a.k.a. the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009) already contains language about how
companies should handle healthcare information, so the foundation
is there: "Combining name and address, for example, with a
patient ID or treatment information automatically means that
information now must be protected and reported if spilled or
stolen," Jaquith says. "Could we see additional
legislation that would start to pull other sectors into a mandatory
requirement regime? Sure -- and credit cards could be one of
them."
For Obama's cybersecurity plans to be successful, Core
Security's Kellermann says the key is for the government to provide
incentives for businesses that practice proper "cyber-hygiene."
"I would hope the president will begin to enact certain plans
and incentives for those businesses that are doing their due
diligence now and have been invested in cybersecurity -- those that
have at least attempted to align with NIST's best practices,"
he says.
If they are using third-party auditors and remediating their
security vulnerabilities, they should receive tax breaks or
government grants, he says. "The actors doing the appropriate
cyber-hygiene should be praised, held up, and should receive
incentives," Kellermann says.
Incentives also could be tied to stimulus funds and investments
in the smart grid, the next-generation power industry
infrastructure, says Shannon Kellogg, director of government
affairs for EMC RSA. "One opportunity the administration has
that wasn't highlighted in the report [released last Friday] was
that as stimulus funds continue to be rolled out, this time you
could build security in with that infrastructure, like smart-grid
investments, and tie in incentives to do that," Kellogg says.
"Why not tie the granting of next-generation infrastructure
funds to the adoption of security controls? I would like to see
more on that front."
Of course, looming overhead is a weak economy that continues to
squeeze IT and security organizations. Core Security's Kellermann
points out that in this economic climate, businesses are often
inclined to outsource more of their IT operations and use more
managed services -- namely cheaper, offshore providers, which can
pose additional security risks. "The problem with economic
situations is they exacerbate the cybersecurity issue," he
says.
Kellermann says he hopes the president's speech will serve as a
wake-up call for companies to better weave security into their IT
strategy. "It's not about building a house on the Internet
anymore...it's how you can maintain the integrity and resilience of
that house now," he says.
Another area that could change for businesses is how they share
attack information with the feds. The Cybersecurity Review report
released in conjunction with Obama's remarks called for better
collaboration between government and industry, says Forrester's
Jaquith. "In order to do this, we will need to see some kind of
'safe harbor' legislation established that would make the
information nondiscoverable and shield corporations from antitrust
issues," he says. "In other words, corporations should not
incur additional legal risk to share."
Jaquith says anonymization and de-identification are likely to
play a central role to help make companies "less reticent" about
sharing attack data with the feds.
Meanwhile, security experts had hoped Obama's new cybersecurity
coordinator would directly report to the Oval Office, but instead
he or she will report to both the National Security Council and the
National Economic Council. Obama said in his remarks on Friday that
he will personally choose the top cybersecurity czar, who will have
a direct line to him.
Lumension's Henry, who expressed disappointment that Obama
hadn't yet named the cybersecurity czar, says Obama's cybersecurity
speech didn't sound much different than what his predecessor,
George W. Bush, had said during his tenure. "The only real
difference I heard was that he's actually going to incorporate
policy into his initiatives," Henry says.
But Kellermann says Obama's remarks signaled a new era in the
nation's cybersecurity policy. "I was heartened for the first
time in 12 years to the potential for the realization by the
powers-that-be that we can win this war," Kellermann says.
"This has ushered in an era where corporate plausible
deniability has finally ended. [Security is] no longer someone
else's problem."
Meantime, businesses can begin preparing for upcoming national
cybersecurity policy shifts by making shifts of their own, like
empowering their CISOs with their own budgets, improving
authentication, and conducting risk assessments, penetration tests,
and code reviews of their Web applications, Kellermann says.
Original Article: http://www.darkreading.com/securityservices/security/government/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=217701118