#7 Nessus Versus Malware - Top Ten Things You Didn't Know About Nessus

Nessus has several different plugins and techniques for helping you with the fight against malware. The video below is part 7 in our series of the top ten things you didn't know about Nessus and covers 3 different ways Nessus can be used to help detect malware:

Below are a few more examples of how Nessus can detect malware:

1. Nessus Network Checks

Nessus plugins in the "Backdoor" plugin family detect certain types of generic behavior on listening services that are indicative of malware. For example, plugin #35322 detects the presence of an HTTP backdoor. Nessus detects the web server remotely and identifies a condition where the web server, regardless of the request, returns a Windows executable:

Continue reading "#7 Nessus Versus Malware - Top Ten Things You Didn't Know About Nessus" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast 110

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 110

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Ron Gula, CEO/CTO
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager

Announcements

New & Notable plugins

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast 110" »

 

Tenable Network Security Episode 109

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 109

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Ron Gula, CEO/CTO

Announcements

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Episode 109" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 108

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 108

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Ron Gula, CEO/CTO

Announcements

  • Check out our video channel on YouTube that contains the latest Nessus and SecurityCenter 4 tutorials. We recently added a 38-minute tutorial of Nessus, covering most of the basic features.
  • We're hiring! - Visit the Tenable web site for more information about open positions.
  • You can subscribe to the Tenable Network Security Podcast on iTunes!
  • Tenable Tweets - You can find us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/tenablesecurity where we make product and company announcements, provide Nessus plugin statistics and more!
  • Want to ask questions about Nessus, SecurityCenter, LCE, and PVS and get answers from the experts at Tenable? Join Tenable's Discussion Forum for custom scripts, announcements, and more!
  • Tenable has released Nessus plugin 57462 to detect that nasty FreeBSD TELNET bug we touched on last week.
  • Nessus plugin 57461 was recently added to scan for Apple iOS Lockdown services
  • PVS can now detect systems reaching out to .xxx domains, enhanced OS identification.

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 108" »

 

Microsoft Patch Tuesday - January 2012

The first round of security bulletins from Microsoft this year raises some interesting questions about the vulnerabilities being patched. I found the following three advisories particularly interesting:

From MS12-002:

The vulnerability could allow remote code execution if a user opens a legitimate file with an embedded packaged object that is located in the same network directory as a specially crafted executable file. An attacker who successfully exploited this vulnerability could gain the same user rights as the logged-on user.

MS12-002 is ranked by Microsoft as important. Sure, it does require that the user browse file systems, however users can be baited, or even forced, to browse to a network share. Social engineering attacks can lure victims to specific sites, and SMB share paths can be embedded inside web pages and URLS, forcing the user to browse to a share or even a specific file.

Continue reading "Microsoft Patch Tuesday - January 2012" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 107

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 107

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher

Announcements

Stories

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 107" »

 

An introduction to Nessus - The Video

Tenable has published a new video which covers the major features in the Nessus vulnerability scanner. You can view the video below:

Please visit the Tenable YouTube channel for more videos and a full HD version of this video.

This video shows you how-to get started using the Nessus vulnerability scanner, including:

  • Where to download Nessus
  • Introduction to policies, scans, and reports
  • Performing an asset discovery scan
  • Running a network-based vulnerability scan
  • Configuring a patch auditing scan
  • Performing a configuration audit
  • Detecting sensitive data (SSN & credit cards)
  • Running web application tests
  • Reporting & filtering
  • Risk analysis and compliance (PCI DSS)

The video runs almost 38 minutes, but covers several major features for those who may be new to using Nessus.

 

Microsoft Patch Management Integration with Nessus - Part 1 WSUS

This is the first post in a two-part series that will cover how to configure Nessus and/or SecurityCenter to integrate with Microsoft's patch management software.

WSUS Patch Management Integration

Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) is available from Microsoft to manage the distribution of updates and hotfixes for Microsoft products. WSUS server 3.0 SP2 supports management of patches for the products listed here, as well as Windows 7 and Windows server 2003 SP2 patches. If you are not familiar with WSUS it is freely available to Microsoft customers as part of your Windows server licensing agreement. A great article that covers all aspects of planning, deployment, and configuration is Windows Server Update Services Learning Roadmap Community Edition.

Nessus and SecurityCenter have the ability to query WSUS to verify whether or not patches are installed on systems managed by WSUS and display the patch information through the Nessus or SecurityCenter. When performing scans with the WSUS patch management plugins enabled and configured please note the following:

  • Credentials entered into the policy take priority - If you've entered credentials into the scan policy and they are valid for a target system, Nessus will login and perform credentialed scanning without querying the WSUS server data.

  • WSUS is queried when credentials fail - If credentials are not valid for a target system, or credentials are not entered at all into the policy at all, the WSUS server will be queried to obtain patch information for those targets. This also applies to other policy settings that may cause a credentialed scan to fail, such as the remote registry or administrative shares settings.
  • The WSUS plugin communicates only with the WSUS server - The WSUS plugin makes a connection to the WSUS server IP/hostname and port specified in the policy configuration (see below in the "Patch Management WSUS Preferences"). This is an important point, as the Nessus server(s) will require access to your WSUS server, which could mean making firewall rule changes to allow the connections. However, this is a significant advantage as your target systems do not need to communicate with the Nessus server directly, which means host firewalls and remote registry settings will not get in the way of a patch audit.
  • Patch information is only as up-to-date as your WSUS server - The data returned to Nessus by WSUS is only as current as the most recent data that the WSUS server has obtained from its managed hosts.

Continue reading "Microsoft Patch Management Integration with Nessus - Part 1 WSUS" »

 

Microsoft Patch Tuesday - December 2011

"From Redmond with Love"

Recently, I had a chance to talk with Katie Moussouris, leader of the Security Community Outreach and Strategy team at Microsoft. The interview helped me realize that Microsoft has a lot to offer when it comes to not just fixing vulnerabilities in their own products, but other companies' software as well:

  • Microsoft has a team of people on the MSVR (Microsoft Vulnerability Research) who look for vulnerabilities in third-party software and help the third-parties fix the issues.
  • MSVR practices Coordinated Vulnerability Disclosure, a term coined by the team and encompasses a philosophy for vulnerability disclosure (and one that omits the word "responsible" due to its misconstrued meanings).
  • Microsoft is showing others how to create more secure software through their SDL program (I hope Adobe is adopting this, and if they have, their implementation is falling short).
  • Microsoft has attempted to tell us where they document security vulnerabilities found internally, but this article seems to talk about variants, which are an off-shoot of the publicly disclosed vulnerabilities, not new vulnerabilities discovered internally by Microsoft. However, I am told that Microsoft does in fact document internally discovered vulnerabilities, but it's not as widely publicized as the monthly bulletins.
  • If you have the skills to come up with the next latest and greatest memory protection design, Microsoft could give you as much as $200,000 as part of the Blue Hat Prize contest.

One thing is for sure, I don't believe that Microsoft isn't trying to create more secure software. In fact, this month's MSRC post shows that critical vulnerabilities reported by outside parties continue to be on the decline. Some may argue that it's because people are not disclosing the vulnerabilities to Microsoft, and while that could be true, they deserve some of the credit for making efforts to improve software security.

Continue reading "Microsoft Patch Tuesday - December 2011" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 106

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 106

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager
  • Ron Gula, Tenable's CEO/CTO

Announcements

Stories


Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 106" »

 

Patch Management Integration with Nessus Released

Today, Tenable Network Security announced integration between Nessus and a variety of patch management systems that will simplify scanning in cases where credentialed scans are difficult or impossible. The integration allows Nessus and SecurityCenter users to establish direct links to patch management systems. This simplifies patch audits as the systems in your environment do not all have to contain credentials in order to be scanned. You simply need to give Nessus credentials to your patch management server. This integration enhances compliance programs and helps eliminate confusion about the patch status of systems between IT operations and network security teams.

With Nessus patch management integration, you can:

  • Retrieve patch manifests and status information from Red Hat® Network Satellite Server, Microsoft® Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) and System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM), and VMware® Go (formerly known as Shavlik).
  • Quickly generate patch compliance reports in Nessus and SecurityCenter, based on the data returned from patch management systems. Presentation of records in the well-known Nessus format can speed auditors’ reviews, and simplify resolution of discrepancies between management systems.
  • Retrieve accurate patch status information for systems that can’t be fully scanned by vulnerability assessment tools because of a lack of credentials. Credentials are only required for access to the patch management system.
  • Retrieve patch status in environments where scanning is not available due to other constraints, such as limited networking.
  • Help eliminate false positives caused by back ported patches in Red Hat Satellite environments.

This integration is available today in the case of Microsoft and VMware Go (Shavlik) systems, and is expected no later than Friday of this week for Red Hat. You’ll find the plugins in the ProfessionalFeed. Configuration documentation is available in the Patch Management Integration documentation. If working with patch management systems is a challenge for you, watch this space – I’ll be posting more details on how this integration works, and you can take advantage of it in your environment.

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 105

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 105

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager
  • Ron Gula, Tenable's CEO/CTO

Announcements

Patch Management Integration

Paul, Jack, Ron, and Carlos talk about Tenable's new integration with patch management platforms such as Microsoft's WSUS, SCCM, Vmware Go, and Red Hat Satellite server.

Download Tenable Podcast Episode 105

 

Mobile Devices, Your Network, and Passive Sniffing

Do you know how many mobile devices reside on your network? Is your security architecture designed to secure the mobile platform and protect your users and the network from the threats they pose?

Stack of Cell Phones

Mobile devices are a security concern for many reasons. Mobile devices are typically unmanaged – meaning they may or may not be running AV software, a firewall, or conform to enforceable security policies. Yet, whether they are provided to your employees as part of your operations or not, they are likely accessing resources on your network. To compound the problem, many mobile devices connect to your local network and the Internet directly on two separate mediums. For example, the device may associate to a wireless belonging to your organization and a 3G/4G connection to the Internet.

Continue reading "Mobile Devices, Your Network, and Passive Sniffing" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 104

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 104

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager
  • Ron Gula, Tenable's CEO/CTO and media expert!

Announcements

Stories

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 104" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 103

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 103

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager

Announcements

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 103" »

 

SecurityCenter Dashboards on the Discussion Forums

One of the primary ways SecurityCenter allows you to visualize the overall security and compliance posture of your network is through the use of dashboards. The SecurityCenter section of Tenable’s Discussion Forums now provides index lists for all of the available Tenable-produced SecurityCenter dashboards grouped by category.

SecurityCenter dashboards are easily customizable to give snapshot information on scanning, vulnerabilities, and events. Tenable provides dozens of dashboard templates in the SecurityCenter Dashboards section of the Tenable Blog. Categories such as “PCI, CIS, & SANS CAG”, “Advanced Persistent Threats & Malicious Software”, and “Vulnerability Tracking, Trending, & Scoring” are split out so SecurityCenter customers can easily find sample dashboards related to each topic. In addition, each post includes a link to a Tenable-produced dashboard XML file that can be imported into SecurityCenter.

  SC_DashboardSample SecurityCenter Dashboard for Intrusion Detection Trend and Correlation

Anyone can create a Discussion Forums account by clicking on the “Register” link on the main page and filling in the requested information. Once you have an account, log into the Discussion Forums and perform a search for “SecurityCenter Dashboards” to find dashboards of interest, find additional information related to SecurityCenter dashboards, or to start your own discussion with other SecurityCenter customers.

 

Discovering Dropbox On Your Network

Why is "Cloud Storage" So Appealing?

Services such as DropBox use the cloud to enable users to share files with others and transfer work from office to home and back. The challenge is two-fold:

  1. Determine how this and other cloud-based technologies align with the organization’s security policies and compliance mandates.
  2. Monitor use of these solutions to ensure compliance and limit exposure while preserving benefit.

Users often turn from sanctioned file sharing methods when they reach the limits of email and internal file sharing capacity, performance, and functionality. Email was not intended to share large files, and very often restrictions are implemented on the size of an individual email and how large your inbox can grow. Users can put files on an internal file sharing service, but that limits access to local users and VPN connected users. Employees who travel or third-parties may not have access to the internal network to retrieve the files. Many IT departments do not offer an easy way to share files through more traditional methods such as public FTP servers because of security concerns.

Dropbox overcomes many of these issues and has become quite popular, as evidenced by a recent influx of $250 million additional dollars in funding. The price is right too, as you can get 2GB of storage for free and manage access to your files.

The problem is, DropBox security and usage often violate corporate policy and security best practice. Corporate policy must protect sensitive information, such as customer data and intellectual property. If this information is being transmitted insecurely to a service such as Dropbox your policies and network defenses should detect this behavior and monitor for violations and information leakage.

For example, Dropbox relies on SSL for encryption. Several attacks released this year have been reported that can circumvent SSL security, and SSL certificate authorities have been compromised, breaking down the trust that SSL relies upon for security and integrity. Client software can become the weakest link as well, even if SSL is implemented properly. The Dropbox client software has contained vulnerabilities that, when exploited, could lead to your data in the wrong hands.

To solve this problem we need to implement encryption at the file level to protect sensitive data. I have to admit, I am a Dropbox user. However, I use it with caution and implement my own security policy. Any sensitive data is sent to DropBox using file encryption (PGP in this case). Any non-sensitive information is not encrypted and I am careful to distinguish between the two.

Continue reading "Discovering Dropbox On Your Network" »

 

Microsoft Patch Tuesday Roundup - November 2011

The most interesting, and concerning, vulnerability patched this month is the remote TCP/IP code execution flaw fixed with MS11-083. The flaw can be triggered by sending a large number of UDP packets to a non-listening port on a remote host. There are several ways in which this could happen very easily, such as a poorly configured firewall, or an open port on a firewall that is allowing traffic the host is no longer listening on. The Microsoft Security and Defense team put together an article to gauge exploitability, and gave it a "2". I'm not sure that helps a whole lot, but if there is one thing that is certain, attackers will be looking to create an exploit for this flaw ASAP.

To help evaluate the vulnerabilities addressed by Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday, Tenable's Research team has published Nessus plugins for each of the security bulletins issued this month:

Resources


 

Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 102

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 102

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager

Announcements

Stories

  • Wi-Fi security do's and don'ts - I agree with most of the recommendations here. WEP is bad, WPA-PSK is not a good solution for businesses, and MAC address filtering is useless. However, WIPS is a bit overstated, and certainly Snort doesn't help you much. The fact is, if you run an open wireless network, it allows for several attacks at layer 2. I do recommend practical network security with respects to WiFi, and designing the network to be robust and manageable will certainly help. However, many think that implementing 802.11i and VPNs is all you need to do. I disagree; treat your WiFi network as hostile, assume clients are compromise and MiTM attacks are occurring, then secure it as such.
  • CIA monitors up to 5 million tweets daily, report says - "A CIA team known internally as the "vengeful librarians" that numbers in the hundreds gathers information in multiple languages to build a real-time picture of the mood in various regions of the world." - I love the title. The technology used to monitor 5 million Tweets is interesting. I wish Twitter would monitor and do something about the evil things and spam that happens on Twitter.
  • BOP Worried, Electronic Jail Cell Doors Vulnerable To Remote Hack - It's good to see this issue get attention. The details are light, but there was a Defcon presentation by the researchers and I've interviewed them on a podcast. The technology used by prisons to secure the doors appears to be susceptible to attacks.
  • 'Nitro' hackers use stock malware to steal chemical, defense secrets - Computerworld - Attackers reportedly used Poison Ivy to compromise systems and steal intellectual property. I am familiar with this malware, and curious as to how it was able to evade even the most rudimentary defenses. Sure, you could configure it to be stealthy, but Poison Ivy tends to be somewhat loud on the systems and the network. We need to have a much better way to detect malware, especially on higher value targets.
  • SecTools.Org Top Network Security Tools - Nessus takes the #3 spot, with Wireshark taking #1. This list was created and voted on by Nmap users.
  • Homemade Hardware Keylogger/PHUKD Hybrid - Really neat post on how to create your own hardware key logger.
  • Show Me Your DNS Logs, I’ll Learn about You! « /dev/random - Fun write-up of the analysis of the DNS logs from the 3rd annual BruCon conference. It was interesting to see that some people do not trust the DNS server provided by the ISP or conference service. You can also determine operating system type based on DNS requests to NTP servers, showing that many attendees were running Ubuntu Linux distributions. Requests to the WPAD domain leaked information about companies that owned the devices, Wordpress was the blog platform of choice, and Gmail remains king for email. There were many requests that were clearly typos, showing that "typo-squatting" could prove useful for attackers.
  • Adidas Websites Hit With ‘Sophisticated’ Hack - A so-called "sophisticated" attack that didn't gain access to customer information. What did they gain access to, company secrets?
  • Microsoft releases Security Advisory 2639658 - The kernel bug that "Duqu" used has been fixed.

Download Tenable Podcast Episode 102

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 101

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 101

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager

Announcements

Stories

  • Chasing APT: Persistence Pays Off - One of my greatest concerns that this article reminded me of is the risk to small business. And by small I mean the number of employees, not how much money they manage. You could likely construct a lucrative business attacking small firms that manage a LOT of money, but are small and have no dedicated IT team, let alone a dedicated security person.
  • Exposing the Market for Stolen Credit Cards Data - Maybe its just me but given that this article states "Liberty Reserve is the payment option of choice for the majority of the portals" can't you just follow the money and/or go after the organizations that are allowing the transactions? I'm sure its far more complicated than that, but just a thought. I'm sure that when targeting drug cartels and organized crime similar avenues are explored.
  • EFF on HTTPS - Great quote from this article: "In short: there are a lot of ways to break HTTPS/TLS/SSL today, even when websites do everything right." So true! There has to be a better way to get this SSL thing fixed. One suggestion from folks at the EFF was to have users rank SSL certificate authorities to build public trust into SSL.
  • US observation satellites hacked - I love this: "The article states that the nature of the attack appears to point to the Chinese military, though it stops short of making a direct accusation." Everyone is always quick to blame the Chinese, likely because people are saying "Well, if anyone would want to hack into a satellite it would be them". I'm saying who wouldn't want to hack into a satellite, thats so cool!
  • Cisco WebEx Player Buffer Overflows Let Remote Users Execute Arbitrary Code - Webex is popular software, and if you were to hold a webinar and tell people they get something for free, you could probably compromise a lot of systems with this vulnerability.
  • 6 Deadly Enterprise Security Mistakes - I have to say, usually when I see articles like this, I take the opportunity to rip them to shreds. I will not do that with this article because I agree with it 110%. Nicely done.
  • Hackers could have TAKEN OVER Amazon Web Services - Imagine if you could take over the cloud, would that make you God for a day?
  • The 8 Craziest YouTube Account Hacks - This is just fun and covers "Beiber Fever" and "Hanna Montana faking her death". Just doesn't get any better than this!
  • Why You Still Can’t Teach a Machine to Hack - I wanted to again explore the debate over automation versus manual testing.
  • US Government Regulations on Piracy

Download Tenable Podcast Episode 101

 

Is that System Managed?

IT auditors, penetration testers, and incident responders often ask if a system they are analyzing is managed. A managed system is one that is being looked after, updated and maintained by an IT staff of some sort. An unmanaged system is one that is on the network, but perhaps has been forgotten, isn’t authorized or has some other reason for it not to be there or updated by anyone else.

Security findings for managed systems and unmanaged systems are reported differently. For an unmanaged system, the recommendation is to make the system managed and bring it into a secured state. For security issues with managed systems, the recommendation is to alter the current management processes to make them more secure.

Unfortunately, there is no “under management” test that can easily be automated. This blog entry will describe some of the different types of data that can be gathered from logs, Nessus scanning and Passive Vulnerability Scanner sniffing that can help identify systems with and without management.

Continue reading "Is that System Managed?" »

 

Tenable Network Security Showcase - Chicago 2011

Join Tenable co-founders Ron Gula and Renaud Deraison, along with Tenable CSO Marcus Ranum and Product Evangelist Paul Asadoorian for a private network security event on November 16, from 8:00 am to 2:00 pm at the Whitehall Hotel in downtown Chicago. Topics we will discuss during this FREE event include:

  • Taking Scanning to the Next Level: How Adding Passive Scanning to your Active Scanning Strategy can Change your Insight to the Enterprise
  • Advances in the state-of-the-art of SIEM: Adding Policy-Centric Knowledge
  • Assessing Web Applications in the Enterprise: Integrating System, Network, Logs and Events
  • Breaking Down Security Information Silos for Better Executive Management Reports

Breakfast and Lunch will be provided, and during lunch you will also see a live demonstration of our enterprise solutions as they relate to the themes above.

Space is limited for this event. I hope you can join us for this informative and interesting event! Please RSVP to: rstewart@tenable.com.

 

Converting Packets to Syslog

Tenable’s Passive Vulnerability Scanner (PVS) performs protocol analysis on network traffic to discover vulnerabilities and log the sessions that have occurred. Unlike network forensic systems which log the actual packets and session content, the PVS creates a single syslog message for each identified network session. These logs are ideal for consumption by a SIEM or log analysis tool such as Tenable’s Log Correlation Engine. This blog entry describes what types of applications are logged and how they can be used for alerting and analysis.

Continue reading "Converting Packets to Syslog" »

 

The Unpatchables

In a perfect world, there would be no vulnerabilities.  In a perfect patching world there would be a patch for every vulnerability and we would always be able to patch all of our systems as soon as a patch was available. In the real world we do the best we can and struggle with testing cycles, incompatibilities, and legacy applications which means sometimes we have to leave insecure and unpatched systems in production.

There are a variety of situations that can cause exposure:

  • Some patches break needed applications or cause compatibility problems
  • Patches may not yet be available for a vulnerability but the systems must stay online and exposed Legacy applications or operating systems may still be required (for example Internet Explorer 6 may be required to access a legacy web application, probably running on a legacy web server)
  • A maintenance window may not be immediately available when patches are released
  • Systems in development environments may be vulnerable during development and testing phases

Continue reading "The Unpatchables" »

 

Dealing with "Untouchable" Systems

"The Untouchables"

An untouchable system is one on which you cannot install software (such as agents) or apply security fixes regularly. I have come up with several different examples of such systems, and tried to use examples here from my own experiences to define why they may fall into the "untouchable" category:

  • Select SCADA systems - This is a broad category, but it boils down to computers that are used in control systems networks. While many may be considered to be "air-gapped" (physically disconnected from any other types of systems), that may not actually be the case since connectivity is required to manage the devices (especially those deployed in the field). I was once approached to perform a vulnerability assessment against one such system. I was told that network access would be provided, but that the system in question was responsible for providing power to thousands of people. This is a scary endeavor, as not only could you put thousands of people in the dark, but potentially damage infrstructure if the power is turned on and off too quickly. This situation requires a different approach than a traditional network vulnerability assessment or penetration testing.
  • Traveling Laptops - It can be difficult to control the software and patches on systems that rarely connect to the corporate network. The concern is what happens when a laptop that has been connected to airport, hotel and other potentially hostile networks comes back to home base and plugs into your network. It may already be infected, and may not be up-to-date with patches. You can try to force users to connect back to your network via a VPN, but not all users may do this on a regular basis. During the user’s travel, the system is "untouchable".
  • Network Devices – Let’s face it, no matter how redundant your network is, you just can't blast out a firmware update to your network gear at will. This leaves a good percentage of network systems that are "untouchable" for certain time periods. Routers have a bit more flexibility, but the physical switches that your systems are connected to cannot be taken down at will, or users will lose connectivity as flashing the device with new firmware requires that the system become unavailable for short time period (or longer time period depending on the device and software).

Continue reading "Dealing with "Untouchable" Systems" »

 

Four Tenable Experts on the Schedule at RSA 2012

We are excited to announce that not one or two but four of our experts have been selected to present at RSA 2012, February 27 through March 2 in San Francisco! Tenable is one of only a few notable security providers in the history of the RSA conference to be selected for four or more speaking sessions.

This year's RSA Conference includes over 220 hands-on sessions, a huge vendor expo (where Tenable will have a booth), high-level networking opportunities and more.

CEO Ron Gula, CSO Marcus Ranum, Product Manager Jack Daniel and Product Evangelist Paul Asadoorian will all be delivering presentations during the conference:

  • Rising to the Challenge of Vulnerability Management in an IPv6 World: Featuring Tenable CEO, Ron Gula
    • The proliferation of IP addresses presents a challenge to the most basic security strategies. This panel discussion offers new techniques to help implement foundational security best practices in IPv6 networks.
  • Cyber War: You’re Doing it Wrong!: By Tenable CSO, Marcus Ranum
    • This presentation sorts through misleading and inaccurate discussions surrounding cyber crime, cyber espionage, and cyber terror, and explains why ‘cyber war’ is – in all forms – both technologically and militarily impractical.
  • Burnout in Information Security Careers: Featuring Tenable Product Manager, Jack Daniel
    • Stress, burnout, rage, despair- all common experiences too many in the IT security community. This panel will discuss the issues, compare and contrast them to other industries, and offer advice on how to recognize stress in ourselves and others, and steps that can be taken to combat it.
  • Offensive Countermeasures: Making Attackers’ Lives Miserable: By Tenable Product Evangelist, Paul Asadoorian
    • This presentation offers a collection of tools to fend off attackers, attribute who is attacking you and, finally, with authorization and legal approval, attack the attackers.

For more information, see our press release or visit the RSA 2012 website.

 

Tenable Network Security Named Fastest-Growing Enterprise Network Security Provider in North America on Deloitte’s 2011 Technology Fast 500™

We are so excited to announce that we were named the fastest-growing enterprise network security provider by Deloitte in their Technology Fast 500! We ranked 261st on Deloitte’s list with a 4-year sales growth of 337 percent and were in the top 10 among local software providers.

This is our second consecutive top-ranking; in August, Tenable was named the fastest-growing private company in enterprise security software by Inc. Magazine. 

Our continued success comes from our unique approach to helping enterprises and government agencies secure their networks from targeted attacks, internal misuse and compliance violations. Tenable's award-winning technology is the only solution which provides continuous assessment and monitoring of vulnerability, patch, configuration, log, event, network and threat intelligence across virtual, cloud and mobile assets into a single database. 

The Deloitte Technology Fast 500 provides a ranking of the fastest growing technology, media, telecommunications, life sciences and clean technology companies in North America. Technology Fast 500 award winners are selected based on percentage fiscal year revenue growth from 2006 to 2010.

If you would like to learn more about this exciting announcement, you can read our press release or visit Deloitte's Fast 500 website.

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 100

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 100

Hosts

Announcements

Stories

In honor of the 100th Tenable podcast, and the nine year anniversary of Tenable Network Security, we've decided to produce a special podcast episode. In this episode we sit down with the founders of Tenable Network Security and ask them ten questions:

  1. How did the three of you meet?
  2. What spawned the idea to create Tenable Network Security?
  3. What are the qualities of Nessus, and its author, that were the driving factors to create the company around it?
  4. What was the first new product created as a company?
  5. What are some of your most favorite milestones in the companies history?
  6. What gets you most excited when you go to work everyday?
  7. What are some of the greatest challenges that organizations face in security and how do our products help them?
  8. What is the strangest feature request you've ever received?
  9. The creation of LCE, the Tenable Log Correlation Engine, is a distinct separatation from vulnerability management. What prompted this move and how does this product set itself apart from other products in the line?
  10. What's coming next for the company and Tenable's products? Spoiler Alert: Renaud gives us a sneak peek into the next version of Nessus!

Download Tenable Podcast Episode 100

 

Tenable Announces Nessus Auditor Bundles

We are pleased to announce the release of four new Nessus Auditor Bundles to our product lineup. These bundles package together Nessus On-Demand Training & Certification with a ProfessionalFeed Subscription, a Perimeter Service Subscription or both, with savings up to $700!

Be among the first to take advantage of this great cost-saving option.

The Nessus Auditor bundles help you get started quickly and economically. Each includes training to get the most from your Nessus solution–and the certification to differentiate yourself in the marketplace.

Bundle Chart

 

Microsoft Patch Tuesday Roundup - October 2011

This month Microsoft released 8 security bulletins, including patches for some interesting vulnerabilities. For example, MS11-075, MS11-076, and MS11-077 all address a type of vulnerability triggered by a user accessing a file share. In Microsoft's own words the user must "open a legitimate file that is located in the same network directory as a specially crafted dynamic link library (DLL) file". MS11-077 describes a similar vulnerability, that achieves the same effect using a font file (.fon extension). In all cases, the vulnerability can be triggered when accessing an SMB or WebDAV share. Vulnerabilities such as these allow attackers to compromise vulnerable systems as they are encountered. It can be a difficult problem to solve, as finding all of the files triggering the exploit could be difficult, especially if you have a very large network with several file shares. Of course, the best solution is to apply the patches provided by Microsoft across your environment.

In MS11-082, Microsoft describes "vulnerabilities [that]could allow denial of service if a remote attacker sends specially crafted network packets to a Host Integration Server listening on UDP port 1478 or TCP ports 1477 and 1478." The risk, in Microsoft's eyes, is minimal as "Firewall best practices" should protect you. Firewalls, really? Anyone who's had a user workstation compromised should have realized that firewalls do little to protect the "internal" network.

To help evaluate the vulnerabilities addressed by Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday, Tenable's Research team has published Nessus plugins for each of the security bulletins issued this month:

Continue reading "Microsoft Patch Tuesday Roundup - October 2011" »

 

#8 Nessus Performs Web Application Scanning - Top Ten Things You Didn't Know About Nessus

Next up on our Nessus top ten list is #8, which covers how to use Nessus to find web application vulnerabilities. I've broken out the process into four different methods supported by Nessus:

1. Test For Known Vulnerabilities

Nessus contains over 2,600 plugins that can fingerprint and detect known vulnerabilities in web applications. Any plugin listed in the "CGI Abuses" or "CGI Abuses: XSS" plugin families is written to enumerate vulnerabilities that have been publicly reported in a web application product, whether open source or commercial. To enable these plugins you must enable CGI scanning in a Nessus policy's "Preferences" section. Even if you enable the plugin families they will not execute unless CGI scanning is enabled.

Below is an example of one such plugin's output:

Picture100-sm.png
Click for larger image

Continue reading "#8 Nessus Performs Web Application Scanning - Top Ten Things You Didn't Know About Nessus" »

 

Tenable Network Security Selected for DoD Assured Compliance Assessment Solution (ACAS) Pilot

We are extremely pleased to announce that the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) has selected HP Enterprise Services and Tenable's solution for the Department of Defense Assured Compliance Assessment Solution (DoD ACAS) pilot. HP Enterprise Services will provide deployment, training, and support for the Tenable solution.

Under the ACAS pilot, multiple DoD and Intelligence agencies will be using Tenable's SecurityCenter, Nessus vulnerability scanner and Passive Vulnerability Scanner for proactive network defense. Our DISA ACAS solution is designed to scale easily and cost effectively, and leverages continuous network assessment and monitoring for a complete end-to-end Unified Security Monitoring approach.

For more information on the ACAS pilot, or to learn how Tenable can help you move to continuous network assessment and monitoring, please click here

 

 

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 99

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 99

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager

Announcements

Stories

  1. iPhone 5 Emails Infect Windows PCs with Malware - Attackers have proven to be very opportunistic when it comes to email scams and malware. Take the iPhone 5 for example, emails sent to thousands of people in an effort to get them to read up on the iPhone 5, which from the screenshot appears to be completely transparent. A neat defiance of physics, the real kicker being that Apple announced the 4S, not iPhone 5 yesterday.
  2. The 20 Controls That Aren’t - Ben Tomhave calls out the SANS CAG as 1) Not being actionable 2) Not able to scale and 3) Being designed to sell a product. While I agree in principle, its all about how you use the tools and guidelines. For example, if I want to know the areas that I should be covering in my information security program and some tips on how to do that, I might turn to the SANS CAG. Then I would go to the CIS benchmarks for recommendations about how to configure my systems security. At the end of the day, I am going to have to buy some products to help me get the job done, and I believe the various standards do not recommend a vendor, but areas in which you should focus on to help secure your organizations. Having said that, don't ignore vendors that provide products or services outside published guidelines, sometimes they can help you the most (of course, sometimes they are just the opposite).
  3. Some Hotel Safes Not So… Safe - We may have covered this one before, but just a reminder, the hotel safes are not safe and there are videos all over the web showing the default password. This one has reached true full-on public status. So you can either carry all of your stuff with you, or is there such a thing as a travel safe? Or, do you try to hack the safe first before putting your valuables in it?
  4. Cisco Patches Slew of IOS Bugs - I love this: "A vulnerability exists in the Smart Install feature of Cisco Catalyst Switches running Cisco IOS Software that could allow an unauthenticated, remote attacker to perform remote code execution on the affected device. Smart Install uses TCP port 4786 for communication. An established TCP connection with a completed TCP three-way handshake is needed to be able to trigger this vulnerability" Yeah, because a full TCP-Three-Way handhake is a defense, that'll stop em'! I love remote code execution on a switch, yes make my port a mirror port. No one is in a big hurry to apply an update to a switch either.
  5. Post Exploitation Shellbaging Security Aegis - I thought Carlos would enjoy this one, its a post-exploitation script that performs an interesting type of file system forensics: "Since the ShellBag keys store various metadata on how Windows Explorer items were arranged and since they are recorded for each user, from a computer forensics standpoint, one can parse the data and pull out various pieces of information that relate to user interaction. When combined with other available computer artifacts, it could provide a more complete picture of what files were accessed or deleted by the user and from what storage device they were accessing at the time (could be either an internal, external or network storage device)."
  6. File Disclosure Browser - DigiNinja - Ever see those weird .DS_Store files on various shares, web servers, and even on your own file systems and USB drives? Turns out those come from OS X and can contain information about your files, and even the location of some hidden files. Robin Wood's script extracts this information from .DS_Store files posted on web sites.
  7. NOTE: This page has been known to trigger A/V alerts, visit at your own risk! - http://securityxploded.com/passwordsecrets.php - Password Secrets of Popular Windows Applications - What a great list of applications and where they store their passwords, and how!
  8. Collected 1st & 2nd Level Domains - Some neat research from Max, who has collected 1st and 2nd level domain information, enumerating the domain names across large sections of the Internet.
  9. Fail a Security Audit Already -- It's Good for You - If that's the case, everyone is really healthy! However, failing is a part of learning. Most do not pass their first security audit, if you do, then why did you pay for one in the first place? You security audit should be telling you things you can do better, because chances are what you are doing has a few gaps or is just simply not enough. Audits, assessments, and penetration tests should tell you something you didn't already know.
  10. More Than One-Fourth of Google Chrome Extensions Contain Vulnerabilities - This is one of the things that keeps me up at night. We rely on all of these frameworks, and each of the frameworks allows people to write code and install it on your system(s). Sometimes that code does evil things.
  11. Sometimes the Security Helpdesk Gets The Last Laugh - Word to the wise: Format and re-install your OS after you've contracted Malware.
  12. Air Traffic Control Data Found on eBayed Network Gear
  13. Bank of America Website Disrupted for Fourth Day in a Row
  14. Check Your Machines for Malware, Linux Developers Told - I wonder if they are also formatting and re-installing? Oh wait, its Linux, it doesn't get viruses.
  15. Law Enforcement Increasingly Asking Internet Companies to Share Data - Yes, 4th Amendment in full swing, we need a warrant, we can't get one, so can you collect the evidence for us?
  16. Amazon Kindle Tablet Routes Web Traffic to Cloud First

Download Tenable Podcast Episode 99

 

Nessus Plugin Spotlight: SSL Certificates

During the past few weeks, the Tenable R&D team has created several plugins to enhance SSL certificate auditing capability. Nessus will identify SSL certificates regardless of port and launch dozens of plugins to check for a variety of weaknesses and vulnerabilities. Three new plugins expand that auditing capability to more effectively audit your organization.

SSL Certificate Fails to Adhere to Basic Constraints / Key Usage Extensions

Tenable has released a plugin titled “SSL Certificate Fails to Adhere to Basic Constraints / Key Usage Extensions” (ID# 56284) to help users verify X.509 / SSL certificate chains. Based on RFC 3280 guidelines, Nessus will examine an SSL certificate found on any port to verify that it adheres to all basic constraints and key usage extensions. If an X.509 certificate in a chain fails to adhere to constraints and usage extensions, Nessus will report that violations are present. This finding means that either a root or intermediate Certificate Authority (CA) signed a certificate incorrectly.

Continue reading "Nessus Plugin Spotlight: SSL Certificates" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast Episode 98

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 98

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager

Announcements

Stories

  1. Don’t Hit the Snooze Button on DigiNotar Alarm Bells - In 1995, we suggested the usage of network firewalls and SSL to protect web applications, and today we suggest that network firewalls and SSL protect cloud computing. There is a balance between evolving countermeasures and not hitting the snooze button on defensive technologies.
  2. So-so SASO … So What? - Bringing more balance to security, there is room for automated testing and static code analysis, but should you let a 3rd party analyze your code? Most would say "Yes", unless you are Oracle...
  3. Sound Database Security Starts With Segmentation - Segmentation needs to have context around it, and be based on the classification and location of your data.
  4. SIEM: Dead as Claimed? - Computerworld - Its fun to see which technology will be declared dead, first it was IDS, now SIEM. Is it really dead?
  5. 3 Indicted in Sophisticated Hacking Scheme - Attacker drove around the city of Seattle and broke into companies physical buildings and/or wireless networks, installed malware on their systems, and attempted to make a profit.
  6. SecurityTracker: Apache Tomcat HTTP DIGEST Authentication Weaknesses Let Remote Users Conduct Bypass Attacks - I've recommended that DIGEST authentication be used over BASIC authentication in Apache. If you implemented my suggestions, make sure you take notice of this patch!
  7. New OS X Trojan Horse sends Screenshots, Files to Remote Servers - I thought Macs didn't get viruses? Turns out they do...
  8. Facebook Unfriending 'Bug' Gets Quick Fix - For Facebook users, this is a big deal, as you don't want your "Friends" to know that you are breaking up with them.
  9. Man Builds Social Network Using Atlantic Ocean - I'd love to see the attacks against this social network, how would a cross-site scripting vulnerability play out?

Download Tenable Podcast Episode 98

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 97

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 97

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager

Announcements

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 97" »

 

#9 Nessus Detects Misconfiguration - Top Ten Things You Didn't Know About Nessus

The Nessus Top Ten List

This is the second post in a series of ten that will cover “The Top Ten Things You Didn’t Know About Nessus”. The first, starting with 10 in David Letterman top ten list fashion, is titled “There's More Than One Way To...” and covers the benefits of both credentialed and uncredentialed vulnerability scanning. Each item on the list will have a blog post and video associated with it. And now, on to number 9: “Nessus Detects Misconfiguration”.

Misconfiguration Leads To Compromise

Nessus helps you answer the question “Do my systems have uniform configuration settings?” Why is this important? Systems are increasingly more complex, and maintaining control of your configurations leads to systems that run smoother and are more resilient to attack. A recent case study that supports this concept was presented in a blog post titled "What do you mean privilege escalation is not HIGH RISK?".

Continue reading "#9 Nessus Detects Misconfiguration - Top Ten Things You Didn't Know About Nessus" »

 

Vote for Tenable!

SCAWARDS2012We’re really pleased to announce that Tenable has been nominated for two SC Magazine Reader Trust Awards!

  • Best Security Information/Event Management (SIEM)
  • Best Vulnerability Management Tool

We need your votes to win!

Here's how to vote for Tenable:

  1. Click Here to access the SC Magazine Reader Trust Awards voting site
  2. Sign in with the credentials SC Magazine has provided to you
  3. Vote for Tenable in the categories of Best SIEM and Best Vulnerability Management Tool
  4. You must vote in at least five categories, so please support your other favorite products too!

If you are an SC Magazine subscriber but don't have credentials, OR if you would like to subscribe AND get credentials, please contact SC Magazine directly.

Tenable has also been nominated in the Excellence categories of Best Enterprise Security Solution and Best Regulatory Compliance Solution.

Go Team Tenable!

 

 

 

#9 Nessus Detects Misconfiguration (Video) - Top Ten Things You Didn't Know About Nessus

Next up on our Nessus top ten list is #9, which covers how to use Nessus configuration auditing to discover information about your system configurations. The following video presents use cases and examples, from PCI compliance to detecting viruses:

Please visit Tenable's YouTube channel for more Nessus and SecurityCenter videos!

 

Microsoft Patch Tuesday Roundup - September 2011

Sensitive Data is More than "Important"

All but one of this month's Microsoft Patch Tuesday updates relates to Microsoft Office applications and/or Windows components that handle documents (such as RTF, TXT, and Word Document files as described in MS11-071). The three Office-related bulletins are listed as "important" on the Microsoft site, despite the fact that they allow for remote code execution. Another bulletin, MS11-074, announces issues with Microsoft's SharePoint, a server application for sharing information and managing documents.

While I don't recommend completely ignoring Microsoft's risk categories, developing your own metrics for risk classification can go a long way to improving your defenses and patch management programs. Vulnerabilities that target Microsoft Office users who have access to sensitive data are a higher priority to patch. It’s critical to know where sensitive data lies so that you can identify if the data is at risk from these vulnerabilities. SecurityCenter's management and Nessus's auditing capabilities provide you with valuable information to identify where sensitive data resides in your network and help you prioritize your patch schedule.

For example, Nessus can perform a variety of content checks to look for credit card, financial, personal, copyrighted and other types of sensitive data. The dashboard below summarizes a variety of different types of sensitive data audits:

Sensitive-Data-Active

One of the things I like best about the dashboard shown above (which can be downloaded from this entry on the SecurityCenter Dashboard Site) is that you can overlay other types of results, such as the systems that contain vulnerabilities for which an exploit exists. If I had to prioritize a patch rollout, I might start with systems that have access to sensitive data and also have vulnerabilities that can be easily exploited.

To help evaluate the vulnerabilities addressed by Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday, Tenable's Research team has published Nessus plugins for each of the security bulletins issued this month:

Continue reading "Microsoft Patch Tuesday Roundup - September 2011" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 96

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 96

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Ron Gula, CEO/CTO

Announcements

Stories

  • 15 Years of Software Security: Looking Back and Looking Forward - First a look back: Remember "Smashing the Stack for Fun and Profit"? Buffer overflows were all the rage and resulted in what the author calls "undesired functionality" in applications. Vendors tended to ignore the vulnerability disclosure process, and many more vulnerabilities and associated exploits floated around the Internet until vendors decided to patch them (or not). The security community as a whole grew up, many companies were created to sell products, and many got bought and folded into larger companies. Before we look into the future, what has really changed? Web applications have provided us with a newer form of the buffer overflow, as the vulnerabilities lead to "undesired functionality", and are as plentiful, if not more, than traditional buffer overflows were. The difference is that they are now spread across thousands of applications and many require end-user interaction. The author then looks into the future, which is dangerous depending on how you look at it. Since it hasn't occurred yet, you can make predictions and it doesn't matter if you were correct or not... it was just a prediction.

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 96" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 95

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 95

Hosts

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher
  • Ron Gula, CEO/CTO

Announcements

Stories

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 95" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 94

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 94

Hosts:

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher

Announcements

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 94" »

 

Tenable Ranks 17th Among Security Companies on Inc. 5000

Inc.500 We are pleased to announce that Tenable has been ranked in the Inc 500/5000 for the second year in a row. In the 2011 rankings, we were ranked the fastest-growing private company in the enterprise security software market. We ranked 934th overall, and 17th among all security companies.

As a company, we’re changing the way that enterprises think about information security solutions by helping them move from ‘point-in-time’ security to ‘continuous’ security and compliance monitoring.  There’s no such thing as ‘good enough security,’ which is why we’re consistently developing new resources and innovative solutions to help our clients stay ahead of emerging threats.  This approach has been the cornerstone of our success.

See more about our Unified Security Monitoring platform at http://www.tenable.com/solutions

See more about the Inc. 5000 on their website: http://www.inc.com/inc5000/welcome 

 

Junos Local Patch Checking Support Added to Nessus

Tenable has authored a collection of plugins to identify Juniper Junos devices and perform local patch checking. By providing SSH or SNMP credentials, Nessus will log into a device running Junos and check for missing patches, such as:

You can enable these plugins by selecting the "Junos Local Security Checks" plugin family when creating policies in Nessus (or SecurityCenter) as shown below:

Junos Plugin Family Selection

Junos Plugin Family Selection

Plugin ID 55392, Junos Version Detection, was added to identify the operating system version of the device being scanned:

Junos Version Detection

Junos Version Detection

Continue reading "Junos Local Patch Checking Support Added to Nessus" »

 

#10 There's More Than One Way... - The Top Ten Things You Didn't Know About Nessus

Drum Roll Please...

Being the Product Evangelist for Tenable Network Security gives me some interesting insight into how the community views the features of our products. I meet some people who provide us with awesome suggestions for improvements and I also meet some people who scan their networks at semi-regular intervals using the default set of policies, unaware of the huge variety of features that Nessus includes.

Hence the project I have been working on: with help and support from the community and my fellow co-workers at Tenable, I have developed what we understand to be a list of the top ten things that people may not know about Nessus.

In part one, I want to explore the differences between traditional network-based scanning and scanning with credentials. So, in traditional David Letterman top ten fashion, we’ll start with number 10!

Speedy Target Safe Cracking
Nessus maintains a balance of speed, accuracy, and intrusiveness.

#10. There's More Than One Way To...

Continue reading "#10 There's More Than One Way... - The Top Ten Things You Didn't Know About Nessus" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 93

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 93

Hosts:

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Ron Gula, CEO/CTO
  • Jack Daniel, Product Manager
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher

Announcements


Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 93" »

 

Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 92

Welcome to the Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode Episode 92

Hosts:

  • Paul Asadoorian, Product Evangelist
  • Ron Gula, CEO/CTO
  • Carlos Perez, Lead Vulnerability Researcher

Announcements

Continue reading "Tenable Network Security Podcast - Episode 92" »

 

Black Hat 2011: The Rise Of The Machines

I attended the Black Hat Briefings this year after teaching the "Advanced Vulnerability Scanning Using Nessus" course. There were several really great presentations covering a wide range of topics. My only wish is that I could have cloned myself and attended more of the talks! Following is a recap of the presentations I attended:

IMG_2324.png
Tenable CEO/CTO Ron Gula presenting in the vendor area at Black Hat, showcasing SecurityCenter, the Passive Vulnerability Scanner, Nessus, and the Log Correlation Engine being used together to detect targeted attacks against systems.

Don Bailey - War Texting Weaponizing Machine 2 Machine

Several of the presentations this year centered on the topic of embedded systems. This is right up my alley, as I've always had a fascination with embedded computing. Don gave some great examples of embedded systems, including:

Continue reading "Black Hat 2011: The Rise Of The Machines" »

 

Microsoft Patch Tuesday Roundup - August 2011

A few interesting notes on this month's Microsoft Patch Tuesday release:

  • Windows DNS servers are vulnerable to remote exploitation. However, they must implement a specific configuration.
  • We've released a new plugin to detect the Remote Desktop Web Access service on Windows.
  • Another five vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer have been fixed. I believe this to be one of the more critical things to patch. While Microsoft claims there are no known exploits, no one can be certain.

To further aid in your efforts to evaluate the exposures presented by the vulnerabilities addressed by Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday, Tenable's Research team has published Nessus plugins for each of the security bulletins issued this month:

Continue reading "Microsoft Patch Tuesday Roundup - August 2011" »