RE: Scanners and unpublished vulnerabilities - Full Disclosure

From: Ballowe, Charles (CBallowe@usg.com)
Date: Thu May 30 2002 - 20:27:30 EDT


An IDS is only really effective when you know the potential risk
of a successful attack. Once something is triggering an IDS, it's
already hitting my systems. If I haven't been alerted to the nature
of that particular risk, my IDS can't be properly set up to respond,
and depending on the nature of the attack, it may be too late anyway.

If my IDS gives me an alert indicating an attempt to exploit a certain
vulnerability and searches for more information on that vulnerability
yield nothing, I'm going to start to wonder. If my IDS is coupled with
a packet capture mechanism, I'll still have the raw data that
triggered the alert. The only difference is whether I had the data
before it was in the wild or not.

Then there's the fact that IDS is a reactive technology and a scanner
is proactive. Many companies treat security breaches in a reactive manner.
This isn't the best approach and some are finally learning the lesson.
Both are needed, but it's better to know before rather than after.

Something else to keep in mind -- a security scanner need not actively
exploit a vulnerability to identify it's presence. Host based scanners
can simply check software versions/patch applications and compare to
known vulnerabilities/fixes in order to trip an alert. Network based
scanners can use network version banners to do the same thing.

-Charles Ballowe

 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jon Bull [mailto:jon.bull@knowledgelinks.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2002 9:07 PM
> To: David Litchfield; Alfred Huger; pen-test@securityfocus.com
> Subject: Re: Scanners and unpublished vulnerabilities - Full
> Disclosure
>
>
> Suggestion - Instead of making a scanner to test for a
> vulnerability that a
> Typhoon user may not be able to prevent, why not create IDS
> software to
> detect the exploit? To me this seems a more defensive,
> responsible, and
> effective role.
>

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