Security Basics mailing list archives
Re: Network Engineer vs. Network Security Engineer
From: "Johnathan" <martinez85 () att blackberry net>
Date: Tue, 12 Jan 2010 04:27:05 +0000
Thank you all for your feedback. Sorry for the late response all, I wanted to wait until a decent amount of responses came in so that I could respond at once .I see my self a security professional who dabbles in a little of everything. As I stated before, our program is really just getting started and there are only two of us within security on the internal side of security. How the company sees my role is a little difficult to answer because my job description really hasn’t been defined and it’s most likely going to come down to my department (myself and the ISO) to come up with a description. We have an internal audit department within our company who hands off a lot of tasks to our department, which we are trying to cut very fast. We are currently in the last stages in the development of our policies and procedures. I’m not, per se, directly involved in the development, but have contributed help to get us to where are at today. The funny thing is that I gave the Senior Network Engineer a heads up that I needed access. He told me that he would need our Director’s approval before he could grant such access, which is currently our procedure. My department actually spoke with him prior to formal request access, and he was fine with this level of access. I received the formal approval from the Director, and once the engineer saw that, he went to him behind my department's back said something that made the Director change his mind. It is still unknown to what the engineer said to the director to make him change his mind. Read access was granted, at the very most. My company isn’t very large in it’s user base, about 5,000 employees, but we are a publicly traded global company and our network is about the equivalent to other large scale enterprises. As I stated earlier, my role hasn’t been clearly defined. Everyone seems to have a valid argument. On one side, if I am developing and implementing policies and procedures, I have no business make any type of changes. On the flip side, if there were clearly defined roles within my security department, I could essentially manage the aforementioned security devices. Here’s the thing, and why I have become upset about all of this. I am very interested in Cisco Security and have already perused the Cisco Security route. What’s the point of Cisco having a security track if I can’t do anything with our Cisco Security Devices? btw, we do have an identity management system in place. ---- Johnathan Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T -----Original Message----- From: Lauren Twele <ltwele () symplified com> Date: Mon, 11 Jan 2010 15:22:02 To: <Michael.Barber () wellsfargo com>; <martinez85 () att blackberry net>; <security-basics () securityfocus com> Subject: Re: Network Engineer vs. Network Security Engineer Are you using an identity management product of any sort to set rules and policies and to monitor audit logs? IDM products also assist with provisioning and de-provisioning of employees. On 1/11/10 12:31 PM, "Michael.Barber () wellsfargo com" <Michael.Barber () wellsfargo com> wrote:
My 0.02 on the topic. First. Any single point of failure.. such as only one person with access to the systems is poor policy and/or management. Who audits the actions of the sole access individual? After that, job roles and definitions have some guidelines.. but, this sounds like more of an internal politics fight. Turf wars are great. A discussion and review on separation of duties would seem appropriate. http://www.sans.edu/resources/securitylab/it_separation_duties.php Good luck. Thanks, Mike Barber Security Analyst PowerBroker, VAS and UnixSecure Support IST - Unix/QA Infrastructure Services (Charlotte) o. (704) 427-0512 m. (704) 607-8879 Charlotte, NC -----Original Message----- From: listbounce () securityfocus com [mailto:listbounce () securityfocus com] On Behalf Of Jason Hurst Sent: Monday, January 11, 2010 10:45 AM To: martinez85 () att blackberry net; security-basics () securityfocus com Subject: RE: Network Engineer vs. Network Security Engineer Hi Johnathan, That is a tough question, and all I could say is that it depends on what you see your role as, and what the company sees your role as. Are you the security auditor and developer of security policy? If you are, then you should NOT have "write" access to the IPS, IDS, Routers, and ASA devices, because then you would be auditing your own work. In that context, you should have "read only" access to these devices, and pass change requests to the Network engineer to make tuning changes. This would enable an adequate level of segregation of duties. However, perhaps you are not the auditor, and you are implementing already established security policy at your company. In that case, you should have "write" authority to these security devices, as the Network Engineer should have primary responsibility of network connectivity, and you should have primary responsibility of security rules. But some further information might be helpful. What was the reason that the Network Engineer gave for denying your access? Was it a segregation of duties argument, or was there something else? Did he deny even read access? Jason Hurst Sr. Network Security Administrator Panda Restaurant Group jason.hurst () pandarg com Please consider the environment before printing this email -----Original Message----- From: listbounce () securityfocus com [mailto:listbounce () securityfocus com] On Behalf Of Johnathan Sent: Saturday, January 09, 2010 9:04 AM To: security-basics () securityfocus com Subject: Network Engineer vs. Network Security Engineer Hello List, I am Security Engineer/Analyst at a company who is currently building their security program and have run into a issue on defining a Network Security Engineer's roles and duties versus a Network Engineer (on the LAN/WAN side) and where a line is drawn and what should overlap. This subject came about when I requested access to our Cisco IPS, IDS and ASAs. The senior engineer (who, by the way, is the only person who has full access to all of our Cisco routers, switches, IPS, IDS, ASAs, etc.) within my company fought to disallow my access. We have Cisco MARS implemented, and I am the primary manager of that device and require access to our Cisco security devices (IPS, IDS, etc.) to sufficiently tune and update the appliance. Was I and am I wrong for requesting access and wanting it? Where should the line be drawn as far as duties and roles? Not just for Cisco security devices but on an enterprise wide scale. I would really appreciate any responses to this. Than You. ---- Johnathan Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Securing Apache Web Server with thawte Digital Certificate In this guide we examine the importance of Apache-SSL and who needs an SSL certificate. We look at how SSL works, how it benefits your company and how your customers can tell if a site is secure. You will find out how to test, purchase, install and use a thawte Digital Certificate on your Apache web server. 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