Firewall Fail: IT Cant Identify All Network Traffic

  /     /     /  
Publicated : 22/11/2024   Category : security


Firewall Fail: IT Cant Identify All Network Traffic


With more and more traffic being encrypted, IT departments are having difficulty identifying the source of traffic coming into their network and past the firewall.



SAN FRANCISCO -- Theres a dirty secret lying right behind the corporate firewall: The IT department cant identify the traffic coming into the enterprise network.
In fact, IT managers cant identify 45% of the network traffic hitting the firewall on any given day, according to a new report. Additionally, almost one in four IT managers cannot identify 70% of their enterprises traffic.
Much of that is being caused by increased use of encryption, said Chester Wisniewski, the chief research scientist for Sophos, which sponsored the study,
The Dirty Secrets of Network Firewalls
.
Fifteen years ago, [IT admins] could go into their firewall and look at it from a productivity and a security standpoint and understand what was happening from a security standpoint because stuff was not encrypted, Wisniewski told Security Now.
(Source:
Jarmoluk via Pixabay
)
You knew this was Spotify and you know this was going to AOL and what was anomalous would stand out, and you could more easily make rules and policy decisions and even forensics, Wisniewski added. Now, you dont know what was stolen because all the data is encrypted.
Part of that is related to Transport Layer Security (TLS) and Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocols that have helped encrypt more and more traffic passing through the Internet. To help combat that, enterprises can use man-in-the-middle techniques, but that adds complexity to the whole process. Additionally, standards --
specifically TLS 1.3
-- will also change that and make it more difficult.
The result is that 84% of respondents told researchers that lack of application visibility is now a serious security concern.
What the survey said to us is that these guys dont know what apps are on the network because everything is TLS and SSL, Wisniewski said, adding that in his estimation about 70% of network traffic is encrypted today and that number could reach nearly 100% in the coming years.
The report, which Sophos released this week to coincide with the 2018 RSA Conference here, is based on responses from 2,700 IT professionals in mid-sized enterprises from the US, Canada, Mexico, France, Germany, UK, Australia, Japan, India and South Africa.
The fundamentals of network security are being redefined -- dont get left in the dark by a DDoS attack! Join us in Austin from May 14-16 at the fifth annual
Big Communications Event
. Theres still time to register and communications service providers get in free!
In the coming months, with the increased use in encryption coming, Wisniewski said the challenge for the industry, including vendors such as Sophos, is to get endpoint devices, which know what the traffic is before its encrypted, to work with and communicate with the firewall to specify what traffic can go past and onto the network.
(For its part, Sophos offers this technology with two offerings:
synchronized security technology
and
Sync App Control
.)
Without that, IT admins are losing time to do maintenance. The study found that most enterprises spend an average of seven days each month to remediate and fix about 16 infected machines. Over half of those surveyed expressed concern about loss of productivity from unwanted and unnecessary apps that find their way onto the network.
In addition, nearly 100% of those surveyed want firewall activity that can automatically isolate infected machines.
We know that you cant block everything, and thats why we have talked about layered security, Wisniewski said. If someone is in there, within the network, can you at least stop them before they leave with the stolen goods.
Related posts:
Alert Warns Russian Actors Are Targeted Unsecured Network Devices
Endpoint Security: 3 Big Obstacles to Overcome
Ransomware: Still a Security Threat & Still Evolving
Data Breach Increase Shows Endpoints Are Under Attack
— Scott Ferguson, is the managing editor of Light Reading and the editor of
Security Now
. Follow him on Twitter
@sferguson_LR
.

Last News

▸ Nigerian scammers now turning into mediocre malware pushers. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security

▸ Beware EMV may not fully protect against skilled thieves. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security

▸ Hack Your Hotel Room ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security


Cyber Security Categories
Google Dorks Database
Exploits Vulnerability
Exploit Shellcodes

CVE List
Tools/Apps
News/Aarticles

Phishing Database
Deepfake Detection
Trends/Statistics & Live Infos



Tags:
Firewall Fail: IT Cant Identify All Network Traffic