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How
secure are your IT systems?
Cyber-terrorism is much more terrifying
than Y2K
by Robert Burke
Patrick J. Sweeney III believes terrorists
are like bullies. They prefer easy targets, says the
president of ServerVault, a managed hosting services
provider in Dulles. ServerVault's bunker-like data center,
though, is no easy prey. The sensitive business data
stored there is guarded by sophisticated anti-hacking
software. If terrorists choose a more conventional attack,
there are wrought-iron fences, around-the-clock guards
and 18-inch-thick concrete walls. Those must be comforting
features to company clients, among them The United Way,
domain name registrar Network Solutions and a department
of the government of Ireland.
Outside ServerVault's walls, however,
it's a different story. Experts say that the Internet
and information networks essential to many businesses
are poorly defended and easy to scramble. Why? They
were never designed to carry sensitive data since security
is hard to keep current and is considered a low priority.
The Sept. 11 attacks in New York and at the Pentagon,
however, have underscored just such a vulnerability.
If more attacks come and the nation's information technology
network is targeted, the U.S. economy could grind to
a halt. "Suppose [terrorists] were able to destroy
the information infrastructure" of a critical financial
network by planting viruses and destroying backed-up
data, says University of Virginia computer science professor
Alfred Weaver. "If that's Bank America, Bank America
is out of business. The stock market is out of business.
That's an incredible nightmare."
In fact, significant if less catastrophic
cyber-attacks are already taking place. Among them are
the recent Nimda and Code Red Worm e-mail viruses and
the February 2000 'denial of service' attacks on the
Web sites of eBay, Amazon.com, E*Trade and Yahoo! Then
there are dozens of lesser-known cases, such as one
involving a teen-age hacker in 1998 who shut down an
FAA control tower at a Massachusetts airport. Anonymous
hackers or unhappy former workers are the most likely
sources of trouble, says Paul Robertson, director of
risk assessment for TruSecure, a Herndon-based security
firm. "The threats in general haven't changed.
Only people's awareness of the threats." At Sweeney's
company: "Our phones have been ringing off the
hook" since Sept. 11 he says. "Before [the
attacks] people said, 'Are you guys being paranoid?'
Now people understand that the threat is real."
Experts say most companies can take
simple steps to protect themselves. First is redundancy
- making sure essential records are backed-up at aseparate
location. Also important is knowing what's on the network.
Many companies don't know how many computers are on
their system or who's using them. Finally, realize that
security is not a fix-and-forget problem. It needs constant
tending to stay current with the latest threats and
defenses. Says Robertson: "You have to look at
security as an investment in the continuity and survivability
of the business."
Still, many say the private sector's best effort isn't
enough. "There is no comprehensive federal plan
for information security at the federal level,"
notes U.Va.'s Weaver. "That's our vulnerability."
Robertson points out that defending against cyber-attacks
is more complicated because the private sector controls
so much of the physical infrastructure and IT network.
"That means a lot of companies are part of the
national infrastructure, but the responsibility for
protecting that is in the hands of that company's network
administrator, who doesn't have a way to find out what's
going on at other companies," he says. "The
attackers are well-coordinated, so the defenders need
to be as well."
One industry group is pushing legislation to remove
a major hurdle to private sector cooperation. The Arlington-based
Information Technology Assoc-iation of America wants
Congress to include rules in anti-terrorism legislation
that would allow companies to exchange "confidential
or proprietary information" about network security
without fear of that information becoming public. That
would require changing anti-trust regulations and adding
Freedom of Information Act exemptions, the group says.
Even before the Sept. 11 attacks, people
were sounding alarms, saying protection of the country's
IT infrastructure was woefully inadequate. Ronald L.
Dick, director of the FBI's National Infrastructure
Protection Center, said in a Sept. 5 speech to security
experts: "An individual out to harm our infrastructure
can infect hundreds of thousands of computers within
a matter of hours. He can find ready targets even when
the vulnerabilities are long known, well-known, further
publicized and easily fixed."
Cyber-security has a higher priority today. In October
President Bush named Richard A. Clarke his special adviser
on cyberspace security. Clarke, a longtime expert on
anti-terrorism, will lead a new government-wide board
overseeing protection of critical information systems.
He had been the National Security Council's coordinator
of security, infrastructure protection and counter-terrorism.
Preceding September's terrorist attack,
government-led efforts were underway to improve security.
The FBI has joined with the private sector to create
InfraGard, a nationwide network for sharing of information
about network security information. There are 65 chapters
nationwide; Virginia has chapters in Richmond, Norfolk
and Northern Virginia. In July, the Department of Justice
announced plans to spend $3 million to add 77 people
nationwide to its computer hacking prevention efforts,
including 10 in Alexandria.
Maybe the biggest boost to IT security was the Y2K bug.
Remember the dire warnings that computers weren't prepared
to handle the date change, and that everything from
ATMs to the air-traffic control system would collapse?
In the U.S. alone an estimated $100 billion was spent
preparing the public and private sector. On the big
day, almost nothing happened. The current threat, though,
isn't quite the same, says Bob Cohen, a senior vice
president with the Arlington technology association.
Y2K forced businesses to create contingency plans and
systems to back up their data in case something went
wrong, he says, "but in terms of intrusion detection
and the things you have to worry about in information
security, I'm not sure there's an overlap."
In terms of handling the heavy demand
after the Sept. 11 attacks, though, the country's voice
and data networks held up fairly well. Texas-based Matrix.Net,
which analyzes Internet traffic, says Internet access
dropped significantly immediately after the attack but
was back to normal within hours. And when voice connections
didn't work, e-mail did: e-mail and wireless message
devices worked when phones didn't because of the ability
of data networks to go around trouble spots. If one
route is blocked, the data goes in pieces another way
and is reassembled at its destination. By comparison,
voice connections whether by wireless or landline require
a single steady connection.
One Virginia company, Alex-andria-based messaging provider
Metrocall, scrambled to get its network working again
after the New York attack. The company had three transmitters
atop one of the World Trade Center buildings; it was
able to restore service within hours to its 80,000 customers
by rushing new transmitters into service across the
Hudson River in New Jersey. The day of the attack, Metrocall
also sent 2,000 of its wireless messaging devices to
the rescue workers and federal officials at the rescue
effort in Manhattan and to the Pentagon in Arlington
County. "Our biggest focus was to make sure we
had communications for emergency services personnel,"
says Rich Dewey, Metrocall's vice president for engineering.
Metrocall, however, suffered a grievous personal loss
in the attacks. Chief Operating Officer Steven Jacoby
was killed along with other passengers when the plane
they were on was hijacked and flown into the Pentagon.
Now security has moved to the forefront
nearly everywhere. Metrocall is already taking orders
for its two-way messaging devices from security officials
preparing for the coming Winter Olympics in Salt Lake
City. ServerVault's Sweeney predicts the job of "chief
security officer" will become a part of corporate
hierarchy. Mississippi-based WorldCom, which has a network
operation center in Loudoun County, is expecting a surge
in security spending in the fourth quarter and early
next year, says spokeswoman Janet Brumfield. "It's
like insurance. A business would never go without insurance."
But many still do, says U.Va.'s Weaver. Look at airport
security. "Everybody knows you could smuggle a
weapon on. Everybody knows that the doors to the cockpit
are flimsy. I'm afraid ... we learn primarily by having
things happen rather than being told that they could
happen." Perhaps. Enough people believed the Y2K
threat, though, and we dodged that bullet. And the threat
of cyber-terrorism feels a lot more threatening than
computers that couldn't tell time.
Return
to Virginia Business - November 2001
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