Howdy Kevin,
I think one fact of the study stands out, and resemeble FUD in no way;
Security practices
The majority of VPN vendors still allow their implementations to leak
information about valid usernames and do not lock
out accounts after a number of failed attempts. This does not happen on
operating system login and should not occur on
VPN implementations.
Sure, the rest of the problems can be said to be admin/implimentation
issues, of course then, my earlier research and findings were also mainly
aimed at admin/implimentation usses as well, commonplace practices.
Commonplace enough to make them the 'norm', there lies the problem.
Thanks,
Ron DuFresne
On Fri, 4 Feb 2005, Kevin Sheldrake wrote:
> That article reads like a lot of FUD IMHO.
>
> According to the NTA Monitor article, the attacks centred around username
> enumeration, password hash capturing through use of Aggressive Mode and
> off-line password cracking.
>
> I don't doubt that a badly configured VPN is insecure (use of the Null
> encryption algorithm springs to mind) and that statistics can claim how
> many are probably insecure, but I do think that the focus is incorrectly
> directed at the VPN technology and not at the
> users/admins/consultants/whoever.
>
> Use certificates. Don't use Aggressive Mode. Patch the software. Don't
> spread FUD unless you have too. ;)
>
> Kev
>
> >
> > We asked about a year and a half ago <maybe two years ago even...> a
> > number of folks on and off this list if our prediction that the use of
> > VPN's resulted in our suspected hypothoses that 75% or more of all the
> > VPN
> > solutions in place actually did little or nothing to protect assests for
> > those employing them, well, the precentage we claimed at the time should
> > perhaps be boosted to 90%+ now eh:
> >
> >
> > February 01, vnunet.com - Virtual private networks (VPNs) are often the
> > weakest security link, study says. A three-year research project by
> > securityfirm NTA Monitor has concluded that nine out of 10 virtual
> > private
> > networks(VPNs) have exploitable vulnerabilities. Most of the companies
> > that
> > had their VPNs tested as part of the project thought that they were
> > invulnerableto hackers, but researchers found the same types of flaw
> > repeated across the whole product range. The report stated that, in some
> > cases, VPNs were actually the weakest security link in an organization.
> > The most widespread flaw involved the hacking of user names. Other
> > vulnerabilities center around password cracking.
> > Report: http://www.nta-monitor.com/news/vpn-flaws/index.htm
> > Source: http://www.vnunet.com/news/1160912
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> >
> > Ron DuFresne
>
>
>
>
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
admin & senior security consultant: sysinfo.com
http://sysinfo.com
...Love is the ultimate outlaw. It just won't adhere to rules.
The most any of us can do is sign on as it's accomplice. Instead
of vowing to honor and obey, maybe we should swear to aid and abet.
That would mean that security is out of the question. The words
"make" and "stay" become inappropriate. My love for you has no
strings attached. I love you for free...
-Tom Robins <Still Life With Woodpecker>
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Received on Feb 05 2005