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NSA, DOD push Common Criteria for civilians
From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2003 00:38:45 -0500 (CDT)
Forwarded from: William Knowles <wk () c4i org>
http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2003/0915/web-secure-09-17-03.asp
By Diane Frank
Sep. 17, 2003
If civilian agencies join the national security community in limiting
technology purchases to items that have gone through independent
evaluation, it could spur vendors to submit more products for
certification, officials testified today before a House subcommittee.
The national security community and the Defense Department already
require any product with a security component, from a firewall to an
operating system, to go through an independent evaluation that
includes the Common Criteria, a set of tests to make sure that
security-related products actually perform the way a vendor states.
As agencies come together to use the Common Criteria to craft
protection profiles descriptions of security characteristics an
agency would like for its IT components the number of certified
products is increasing. The trend would move even faster if civilian
agencies were to join in the demand, said Michael Fleming, chief of
the Information Assurance Solutions Group in the National Security
Agency's Information Assurance Directorate.
Fleming testified before the House Government Reform Committee's
Technology, Information Policy, Intergovernmental Relations and the
Census Subcommittee. NSA and the National Institute of Standards and
Technology formed the National Information Assurance Partnership to
oversee the Common Criteria evaluation.
But civilian agencies only consider the Common Criteria as a
recommended rather than required factor in technology purchases, and
many have said there is a shortage of products that have gone through
the evaluation.
There are still many questions about the effectiveness and potential
role for the Common Criteria evaluation, but increasing the market by
bringing in the civilian agencies will only help, said Robert Gorrie,
deputy director of the Defensewide Information Assurance Program.
"The number of systems that are being evaluated, although sufficient
right now, needs to be much, much higher," he said.
The Bush administration's National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace,
released in February, proposed a full review of the effectiveness of
the Common Criteria requirement in the national security community and
a study of the potential for expanding the requirement to the rest of
government.
DOD is now conducting the initial review with the Homeland Security
Department, Gorrie said. Unofficially, DOD experts have found that
including the requirement in a larger information assurance policy
helps to push security to the development end of a system's lifecycle
so less patching is necessary, he said.
The effects save time and money. And by encouraging well-engineered
products, the hope is that fewer patches will need to be issued in the
future, said J. David Thompson, director of the security evaluation
laboratory at CygnaCom Solutions, an Entrust company and one of the
NIAP-certified labs.
Common Criteria satisfies the specific task of assuring an agency that
the product does what the vendor says it will do, said Ed Roback,
chief of the Computer Security Division at NIST. However, the
evaluation must be paired with further testing and policies, such as
system-level certification and accreditation, that check how the
product works within an agency's specific network environment, he
said.
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without communications is irrelevant." Gen Alfred. M. Gray, USMC
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