At a Department of Homeland Security Summit, government and corporate security teams are taken to task for failing to address critical issues of software assurance, testing and lifecycle support.

Rutrell Yasin, Freelance Writer

April 20, 2015

5 Min Read

Government agencies and organizations in the private sector must place more emphasis on software analysis, testing and life-cycle support to mitigate threats exploiting known vulnerabilities and new avenues opened up by the use of open source and re-used software components, according to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

Joe Jarzombek, director for software and supply chain assurance with the DHS, made the remarks at the recent CISQ IT Risk Management and Cybersecurity Summit, and stated that federal agencies need dedicated teams to accomplish these tasks. The summit provided insights and best practices about how to mitigate vulnerabilities from a development and acquisition management perspective.

During the summit Jarzombek highlighted several trends affecting software development and acquisition, and advised organizations to address these as they plan out and implement security programs.

Security is the backbone of software assurance. Software quality, or managing the effects of unintentional defects in a component or system, has been a major focus in applying software assurance. Safety, another aspect of software assurance, is managing the consequences of unintentional defects. Security is the process of managing the consequences of attempted or intentional actions that are targeting exploitable construct processes or behaviors.

According to Jarzombek security is the part that organizations are not handling well today. He noted that basic ‘cyber hygiene’ including effective patch management is one of the keys to raising the bar of protection and completing the security loop. Data suggests that 80 percent of exploitable vulnerabilities are the result of a failure to install effective patch management programs, configuration management programs and software update programs.

Bob Dix, VP of Policy for Juniper Networks and a former House Oversight and Government Reform Committee member suggested there was a need for a global, comprehensive and sustained security awareness campaign. CISQ, an IT industry group, is one organization working to introduce a computable metrics standard for software quality at the source code level.

Third-party code and plug-ins are the achilles heel of web applications. Most software is composed of open source and reused components laden with known vulnerabilities, Jarzombek explained. That means that more software products and information, communications and technology (ICT) products with programmable logic are being pre-installed with malware. “Does that mean the developer had malicious intent?” Jarzombek asked. Not necessarily. The developers weren’t paying attention as they pulled down a module. To combat this, organizations need policies in place to identify these risks and thwart potential risk of attack.

SQL Injection and Cross-Scripting constitute the more frequent and dangerous vector of attacks. IT managers are deploying firewalls, intrusion prevention systems and demilitarized zones, but still wonder why their systems are compromised. They are being exploited at the “soft underbelly of the enterprise” – application software. People know about cross-scripting and SQL injection attacks, but don’t understand it. “Someone on your team should know exactly what [these attacks] do and what they are trying to exploit,” Jarzombek said. These attacks and their exploits are known as common weakness enumeration (CWE). The attacks and how to defend against them can be found in a free online community dictionary hosted by Mitre Corp. and sponsored by the Homeland Security Department.

The supply chain is emerging as a favorite attack target. This trend opens up the door for more tainted products with malware and exploitable weaknesses being passed onto enterprises and consumers. The world is increasingly dependent on a global supply chain that uses globally-sourced ICT hardware, software, and services. These products and services have varying levels of development and outsourcing controls and varying levels of acquisition due-diligence as well as a lack of transparency in the process chain of custody.

One fix is for organizations to familiarize themselves with identifying, assessing, and mitigating ICT supply chain risks at all levels of their organizations. Both the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) (Supply Chain Risk Management Practices for Federal Information Management Systems and Organizations) and the DHS (Software Supply Chain Risk Management and Due-Diligence) have published useful guides on this topic.

The importance of software testing and lifecycle support. These measures are critical since no single automated security tool or method will be effective. A few years ago, DHS initiated the Car Wash program – “testing applications against exploitable weaknesses before we accept them” and “providing life-cycle support to check for new reported vulnerabilities and to make sure we stay updated with relevant patches”, said Jarzombek.

Attendees at the summit shared specific lessons-learned through the application of a disciplined methodology, supplemented by a suite of tools implemented by skilled practitioners. One concept discussed was the concept of software code quality checking (SCQC), which scans source code, executables and related artifacts to ensure that a system under review can continue with development, demonstration and testing. The Department of Defense noted that on its better systems they go through five test cycles, basically working out bugs in the code not functional defects. The department’s IT specialists then look at the code to see whether it merits further evolution throughout the process, and can meet performance, maintainability and usability requirements within cost, schedule and other system constraints.

Focus on sharing. As government and industry establish more information sharing and analysis centers to counter cyber threats, the focus should be on more than the threats and blocking them but on what, those threats are attempting to exploit. Earlier technical testing can help, and finding the easiest practical exercise within that security ring to achieve as much security as possible is the best solution. “We have to talk of the associated attack patterns and exploit targets along with mitigating courses of action in terms that are machine-exchangeable, so we can share this information at wire speed (based on organizational sharing policies),” Jarzombek cautioned .

About the Author(s)

Rutrell Yasin

Freelance Writer

Rutrell Yasin has more than 30 years of experience writing about the application of information technology in business and government. He has witnessed all of the major transformations in computing over the last three decades, covering the rise, death, and resurrection of the mainframe; the growing popularity of midrange and Unix-based computers; the advent of the personal computer; client/server computing; the merger of network and systems management; and the growing importance of information security. His stories have appeared in leading trade publications, including MIS Week, The Report on IBM, CommunicationsWeek, InternetWeek, Federal Computer Week, and Government Computer News. His focus in recent years has been on documenting the rise and adoption of cloud computing and big-data analytics. He has a keen interest in writing stories that show how technology can help spur innovation, make city streets and buildings safer, or even save lives.

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