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| Subject: | Re: IPS, alternative solutions |
|---|---|
| Date: | Wed, 22 Sep 2004 23:18:02 -0400 |
WARNING: Long...
Kyle Maxwell wrote:
(Apologies if this is a resend, Gmail crapped out briefly and it appeared to not go thru)
On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 17:11:38 -0400, Jason <security@brvenik.com> wrote:
Cure, Samuel J wrote:
I do agree however with the resource requirements necessary for testing and rolling out each patch or hotfix.
I think we can all agree that IPS is no replacement for Patch Management. My point is that there is no demonstrable ROI that I have seen for IPS yet there appears to be a perception that it is a more cost effective way of dealing with the problem. This is likely a result of the parroting by some IPS vendors of a virtual patching concept. I am open to the case if it can be shown, this is why I asked anyone to provide an actual ROI.
Actually, I think what Samuel posted is the ROI: with shorter cycle times between vulnerability disclosure to patch availability to attacks (including worms), having IPS helps you protect servers during that period between signature availability (hopefully very close to vulnerability disclosure) and patch rollout. Not that I advocate quarterly updates, but organizations do need some time to test the patch and roll it out. That can range from a few days to a few weeks (if problems arise) and reducing your exposure, even if it's not totally eliminated, is valuable.
I say lets take the challenge.
A brief summary of the vulnerability from cert
http://www.us-cert.gov/cas/alerts/SA04-258A.html
Some easy reading about it can be had here
http://netghost.narod.ru/gff/graphics/summary/jfif.htm
Don't forget TIFF.
http://netghost.narod.ru/gff/graphics/summary/tiff.htm
- A web page as a regular JPEG. - A web page as a gz compressed JPEG. - A regular MIME encoded JPEG. - A gz compressed mime encoded JPEG. - A zip compressed mime encoded JPEG. - A TIFF with an embedded JPEG byte stream. - A gz compressed TIFF... - linked to over smb - linked to over ftp - attached in an IM - Copied to a fileserver - Embedded in Word sent as a MIME encoded mail - Embedded in Excel as a MIME encoded mail - Embedded in Powerpoint as a MIME encoded mail - Embedded in Visio as a MIME encoded mail - Embedded in chm as a MIME encoded mail - Embedded in scr as a MIME encoded mail - Embedded in bmp as a MIME encoded mail - Embedded in pdf as a MIME encoded mail - zip all of those - incorrect mime types provided on download
And the list goes on forever.
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