Information Security News mailing list archives

Too many UK businesses exposed to hackers


From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Thu, 1 May 2003 02:59:11 -0500 (CDT)

http://www.vnunet.com/News/1140544

By Andy McCue 
[29-04-2003]

Survey finds high-risk vulnerabilities down but low-risk ones on the
rise.

A third of UK businesses are leaving themselves exposed to hackers by
failing to crack down on medium and low-level security flaws,
according to the results of a network monitoring survey.

The fifth annual Security Audit survey by consultant NTA Monitor found
that, despite tackling major security vulnerabilities, UK companies
are failing to address smaller flaws.

The audit examined data from more than 600 regular network perimeter
security tests carried out by the company at client sites during 2002.  
One-third of corporate networks tested were found to have at least 10
flaws.

"A third of companies we examined were guilty of bad security
housekeeping,with unacceptably high levels of basic flaws found," said
Roy Hills, technical director at NTA Monitor, in the report.

"Although corporates are clearly prioritising security vulnerabilities
and addressing high-profile issues this is at the expense of a much
larger number of lower-profile vulnerabilities, which are being
ignored.

"The net result is that corporate networks remain exposed to external
attack."

Just six per cent of businesses had a high-risk vulnerability which
could allow hackers to access and take control of computer systems -
down from 19 per cent the previous year.

But medium-profile vulnerabilities were found in 73 per cent of tests,
and low-profile vulnerabilities were found in every test instance.

Vulnerabilities in router and firewall systems remain at an
"unreasonably" high level, often because they are installed with a
standardised configuration geared towards functionality and up-time,
said the survey.

Medium-risk issues allow external users to disrupt services or
internal users to gain unauthorised access to systems, and a low-risk
issue provides information that could be useful to a hacker in
attempting an external attack, according to NTA Monitor.

The survey found that the main low-level flaws causing problems are
DNS vulnerabilities, which have risen from 70 per cent in 2000 to 83
per cent last year.

The DNS Zone Transfer vulnerability enables hackers to gain a
company's DNS data, such as network names and addresses, which can be
utilised in malicious attacks.

Server-related vulnerabilities were the only area to show a fall
during the five years of the survey, down to 73 per cent this year
from 86 per cent last year. NTA Monitor put this down to the increased
level of management attention devoted to websites.

Users should focus on good security design and policy and then
configure all systems according to that plan, advised NTA Monitor.



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