Standing in the Rain Isn't Diving in the Sea

Meanwhile in Security

Sep 2 2021 • 9 mins

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Transcript

Jesse: Welcome to Meanwhile in Security where I, your host Jesse Trucks, guides you to better security in the cloud.

Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by Thinkst Canary. This might take a little bit to explain, so bear with me. I linked against an early version of their tool, canarytokens.org, in the very early days of my newsletter, and what it does is relatively simple and straightforward. It winds up embedding credentials, files, or anything else like that that you can generate in various parts of your environment, wherever you want them to live; it gives you fake AWS API credentials, for example. And the only thing that these things do is alert you whenever someone attempts to use them. It’s an awesome approach to detecting breaches. I’ve used something similar for years myself before I found them. Check them out. But wait, there’s more because they also have an enterprise option that you should be very much aware of: canary.tools. You can take a look at this, but what it does is it provides an enterprise approach to drive these things throughout your entire environment and manage them centrally. You can get a physical device that hangs out on your network and impersonates whatever you want to. When it gets Nmap scanned, or someone attempts to log into it, or access files that it presents on a fake file store, you get instant alerts. It’s awesome. If you don’t do something like this, instead you’re likely to find out that you’ve gotten breached the very hard way. So, check it out. It’s one of those few things that I look at and say, “Wow, that is an amazing idea. I am so glad I found them. I love it.” Again, those URLs are canarytokens.org and canary.tools. And the first one is free because of course it is. The second one is enterprise-y. You’ll know which one of those you fall into. Take a look. I’m a big fan. More to come from Thinkst Canary weeks ahead.

Jesse: Disaster befell much of the middle south of the US when Ida slammed into the coast and plowed its way up north through the land. What does a hurricane have to do with security? Business continuity. Business continuity is the discipline of maintaining business operations, even in the face of disasters of any kind, such as a hurricane-driven storm surge running over the levees and flooding whole towns. If you have all your computing systems in the cloud in multiple regions, then such a disaster won’t fully halt your business operations.

However, you still might have connectivity issues and possibly either temporary or permanent loss of non-cloud systems. Be sure your non-cloud systems have appropriate backups off-site to another geographically disparate location. Better yet, push backups into your cloud infrastructure and consider ways to utilize that data with your cloud systems during a crisis. Hmm, perhaps you’ll like it so much you will push everything else up to the cloud that isn’t a laptop, tablet, or phone.

Meanwhile in the news, Microsoft Azure Cloud Vulnerability Exposed Thousands of Databases. Security for cloud providers can potentially have catastrophic and large scale repercussions. Keep an eye out for any problems that come up that might affect your operations and your data. Do keep in mind your platform has a direct impact on your own risk profile.

Google, Amazon, Microsoft Share New Security Efforts After White House Summit. The National Institute of Standards and Technology—or NIST—is building a technology supply chain framework with the big tech companies, including Apple, Amazon, Google, IBM, and Microsoft, and this is a big deal. I’m sure the fighting amongst those companies will make this initiative die on the vine, but I hope I’m wrong.

New Data-Driven Study Reveals 40% of SaaS Data Access is Unmanaged, Creating Significant Insider and External Threats to Global Organizations. Back to basics: secure your data; lock down those buckets; don’t be stupid. Also, when we’re talking cloud apps and services, there should be no assumption that anyone accessing the application via an obfuscated link or permissions too broad to
effectively secure the data therein.

Announcer: Have you implemented industry best practices for securely accessing SSH servers, databases, or Kubernetes? It takes time and expertise to set up. Teleport makes it easy. It is an identity-aware access proxy that brings automatically expiring credentials for everything you need, including role-based access controls, access requests, and the audit log. It helps prevent data exfiltration and helps implement PCI and FedRAMP compliance. And best of all, teleport is...

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