Ben,
If you had gotten your head out of the clouds and gotten the
"Deep Inspectotron Application Fireweasel" off the ground we wouldn't
these issues. (I don't remember if the draft spec. had it baking
muffins, however, so there is always something, isn't there?)
--Fritz
-----Original Message-----
From: firewall-wizards-admin_at_honor.icsalabs.com
[mailto:firewall-wizards-admin_at_honor.icsalabs.com] On Behalf Of Ben Nagy
Sent: Sunday, November 28, 2004 4:58 AM
To: 'Paul D. Robertson'; MHawkins_at_TULLIB.COM
Cc: firewall-wizards_at_honor.icsalabs.com
Subject: RE: [fw-wiz] Antivirus vendor conspiracy theories
> -----Original Message-----
[MHawkins]
> > Antivirus vendors have painted themselves into their own
> conspiracy theoried
> > corner by purveying a product that is based on technology
> that is purely
> > reactive and for the last ten years they've use one method
> of protection
> > thereby enabling other attack vectors to be repeatedly successful.
And this is a bad thing WHY, exactly? AV does a very good job, in
general,
at looking at dodgy things as they enter and leave the filesystem. That
was
the original job of AV and remains the core of the products.
A firewall, for example, does a generally good job of allowing or
declining
traffic at layer 3/4, but a generally crappy job at looking at layer 7.
That
doesn't mean that firewall vendors are hopeless and that they haven't
evolved over the last ten fifteen years.
The problem starts when "the market" start expecting FW+AV to protect
them
from all current threats - well they don't. You may as well get mad at
your
fire alarm when the pipes burst in your roof.
At a host level malware is using a bunch of different attack vectors
which
were never in-spec for AV. Worms work by hijacking execution somehow,
which
is all happening in memory, before the AV gets a shot at it. They
require no
user interaction to spread, whereas AV have typically looked at Viruses
(gasp) which _do_ require user interaction.
Spyware, adware and all those tasty browser malwares work by exploiting
the
security identity of IE, making it impossible for an AV to tell that the
functions are not what was intended.
[MHawkins]
> > after year major infections spread and the consumer, faced with the
> > cognitive dissonance between antivirus vendor marketing
> spin and the reality
> > of a system rebuild, crashes, deleted files etc, wakes up
> and realizes that
> > the antivirus vendors are peddling an awful product that
> really doesn't
> > protect their system at all.
[Paul]
> AV works against almost 100% of existing in-the-wild viruses,
> and probably
> greater than 90% of new viruses, that's not "doesn't protect
> their systems
> at all."
[...]
Exactly. AV protects well against viruses. Do the vendors call it "anti
all
kinds of malware"? No. Do they claim that it bakes muffins? No.
In fact, everyone is scrambling to get products ready for a market that
is
thinking exactly what you are saying, Mike - that the simple fact is
that
FW/AV doesn't protect well against current malware. To a large extent,
that's because said malware is specifically designed to bypass those
kinds
of protection.
[Paul]
> The market won't accept better mechanisms, just like better
> firewalls are disdained in favor of IDS, which is also a reactive
> technology.
I don't think that's the case. What the market won't accept are _ideal_
mechanisms. Pretty much all the major players are betting they'll buy
Yet
Another Type Of Protection Software in droves. Personally, I think it
should
be called YATOPS, but vendors think H-IPS (Host Intrusion Prevention
Systems) is more exciting - presumably by virtue of being tantalisingly
vague.
We went around this turnstile a few months back, with mjr ready to hold
down
the current state of OS / Software and hammer a stake through it's
heart.
YATOPS vendors think we can keep it limping along for another few years.
[Paul]
> As an industry, we've failed in getting vendors to go the
> "this is now allowed to work" have it blessed first mode, so
> we're left with picking up the pieces reactively.
Right. Maybe in ten years every PC will just be one big mobile code
interpreter with proper sandboxing. Who knows.
Cheers,
ben
(Disclaimer, I work for a YATOPS vendor, which may affect my point of
view)
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Received on Dec 03 2004