Tag Archive for AAPL

What the FREAK !

What the FREAK !Earlier this month news broke that Google, Apple, and Microsoft are vulnerable to a new bug poetically called – Factoring RSA Export Keys – FREAK. The cause of the FREAK bug is not new. In fact, the origin of the FREAK back goes back to the 1990s and government meddling.

weaker HTTPS encryptionPaul Dirkin at Sophos’ Naked Security blog explains that FREAK is a risk to all users. It is a risk because an attacker can trick you and the server into settling on a much weaker HTTPS encryption scheme than from the 1990s. Basically, the attacker gets you to use what’s called “export grade” RSA encryption. Export grade encryption is a ghost from an earlier U.S. Gooberment attempt to break encryption. In the ’90s the NSA required exported encryption to be deliberately weakened. The idea was that export grade keys were just about good enough for every day, not-so-secret use, but could be cracked by superpowers with supercomputers if national security should demand it.

No one should be using export-grade keys anymore – indeed, no one usually does. But many clients and servers still support them according to Sophos. Somehow, in 2015 it never seemed to matter that the 1990 code was still lying around.

U.S. Gooberment attempt to break encryptionIf attackers can watch the traffic flowing between vulnerable devices and websites they could inject code that forces both sides to use 512-bit encryption, which can be easily cracked. It took researchers seven months to crack the key In 1999, the article claims that the same crack takes about 12 hours and $100 using Amazon’s (AMZN) cloud in 2015. It would then be technically pretty straightforward to launch a MITM by pretending to be the official website.

Now that your security is compromised, an attacker can use a “man in the middle” attack (someone who can listen into and change the network traffic between you and your destination server).

FactoringAdditionally, the author says many servers use the same RSA key over and over again. This allows attackers to use the compromised export grade key to decrypt other sessions, using the same key. Another risk Sophos claims is that export-grade keys allow evil-doers to steal both the public and private keys by using a technique known as “factoring the modulus,”  With the critical private key, criminals can now sign traffic from an imposter website as though it came from a trusted third-party.

The author says the team that identified the original FREAK vulnerability claim to have used this bug to create a fake nsa dot gov. University of Michigan computer scientists J. Alex Halderman and Zakir Durumeric, told InfoSecurity that the vulnerability affects around 36% of all sites trusted by browsers and around 10% of the Alexa top one million domains.

The good news, according to Sophos: Users of Chromium/Chrome and Firefox are OK.

The bad news – the bug affects TLS/SSL, the security protocol that puts the S into HTTPS and is responsible for the padlock in your browser’s address bar. The bug is known to exist in:

  • OpenSSL‘s TLS implementation (before version 1.0.1k), which includes Google (GOOG) Android‘s “Browser” browser, and therefore probably Samsung‘s (005930) derived browser known as “Internet.”
  • Apple (AAPL) SecureTransport puts OS X software at risk, including Safari.
  • Microsoft (MSFT) Windows Schannel TLS library puts Windows software including Internet Explorer at risk.

You can check to see if your browser is vulnerable to the FREAK attack on a UMich page here.

You can also check on your favorite website on this UMich page.

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“Export grade” encryption was largely abandoned by 2000 because it was a bad idea. silly idea. It hurt the US software industry and Americans who bought an inferior product. It is still a dumb idea in 2015. As the Gooberment wants to cripple the latest generation of encryption by putting backdoors into encrypted messaging. They seem to have won with Google. Google has dumped plans to encrypt communications by default in Android.

In the short term, if you are worried, use another browser Firefox or Chrome.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Scary PII Numbers

Scary PII NumbersAs you may have heard by now, the second-largest health insurer Anthem gave away at least 80 million of their customers’ PII records to hackers. I say at least because these always grow as the experts dig through the wreckage. The WSJ reports the Indianapolis-based insured did not encrypt this data (I covered encryption here and here). That means customers’ social security numbers, phone numbers, and other PII were easy targets for Chinese hackers according to CNBC.

did not encrypt data

Anthem is just the latest. There are even larger targets out there. The Business Insider published some pretty scary numbers. BI reports that somehow the biggest tech companies have done a great job at convincing people that their services for sending/receiving payments and purchasing goods are trustworthy and worthwhile. The article estimates that Apple has somewhere around a billion iTunes accounts (with plenty of PII and credit cards) on file.

This chart from BI IntelligenceApple (AAPL) is nearing a billion iTunes accounts on file, and that number is likely to surge immensely. Customers in China can now link their UnionPay payment cards to their Apple IDs: For context, UnionPay is the largest card network in the world with more cards in circulation than Visa and MasterCard combined.

Amazon (AMZN) has approx. 300 million payment cards on file while PayPal has around 200 million payment cards on record.

Apple, Amazon, PayPal Payment Cards on File - Business Insider

A second BI article indicates that based on leaked Uber data charted analyzed by BI Intelligence, the ride-sharing firm has well over 12 million payment cards on file. Their closest competitor Hailo has 4.4 million payment cards on file.

Ride-Sharing Payment Cards on File - Business Insider

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You have been warned. The next mega data breach could come from a tech firm like Apple or Amazon.

Data theftThe WSJ article argues that companies can use many techniques to secure their data, but those things slow companies down, sometimes to a degree they find unacceptable.

I think most victims of identity theft or credit fraud find that unacceptable.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Windows 7 Reaches Middle Age

Windows 7 Reaches Middle AgeNow that you have almost eliminated Microsoft (MSFT) Windows XP from your network and settled on Windows 7 it should be time to catch your breath. But NOOO!! Windows 7 has reached the end of mainstream support.  That’s right we are already 5 years into the Windows 7 era. Repeat after me… Windows 7 still has five years left … Windows 7 still has five years left … Windows 7 still has five years left.

MMicrosoft Windows 7 logoicrosoft commits to 10 years of security fixes and 5 years of feature enhancements and bug fixes for each major OS release. Windows 7 has moved from mainstream support – free help for everyone – to extended support, which means Microsoft will charge for help with the software. That will end in 2020 when Microsoft turns out the lights on Windows 7 for good.

The recent techno-flops from the boys and girls in Redmond, Vista, and Windows 8 have taught enterprises to plan for a new desktop OS every other release. This puts businesses in a bind. MSFT’s track record prevents forward-looking firms from organically growing their desktop fleet into the next cycle. There are those that argue that until Microsoft separates consumer from commercial desktops, Microsoft commercial customers will continue to skip one or more iterations of Windows, their only real answer to the high costs and disruption of upgrading.

Gregg KeizerMirosoft update cycle at ComputerWorld cites research from Gartner (IT) which prognosticates that many enterprises cannot change their processes. Many organizations will go through the same machinations they did with XP. Or maybe even balk at dumping Windows 7 at the same pace as the venerable Windows XP, making things worse. Michael Silver of Gartner told ComputerWorld that having a plan could help organizations avoid a repeat of XP’s expensive end-of-support scramble. Gartner believes that the same EOL mad-scramble we saw with XP will occur again when time is up on Windows 7. Mr. Silver claims:

[A repeat of Windows XP] is certainly likely to happen … One of the big differences that’s been under-considered is that because Vista took five years to come out [after XP], there were eight years between XP and Windows 7. So Windows XP felt pretty old. … Windows 7 won’t feel that old to people…” 

Microsoft Windows 10 logoMr. Keizer argues that the failure of Windows 8 to win enterprise hearts and minds has created an oddity: Even though Windows 7 has made middle age, Microsoft continues to let OEMs sell PCs running the Windows 7 business edition.  Microsoft has yet to name an end date for OEM sales of machines powered by Windows 7 Professional. But because it has promised a 12-month notice, those PCs can still be sold at least until early January 2016, when the OS has but four years of life left.

But if you are just finishing your last migration, then you don’t have all that much time to start planning the next one.

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If you don’t like the Redmond hamster wheel, consider your alternatives. Sophos compares the Windows upgrade schedule to some other options. 10 years might be the best option out there. For example:

  • Apple’s (AAPL) OS X is supported for mystery years,
  • Apple’s mobile iOS is supported for mystery years (3?)
  • Android seems to leave it up to you, but don’t expect Google (GOOG) to commit to securing it.
  • Ubuntu LTS is supported for around 5 years, and
  • Red Hat Enterprise 13 years (with extended support).
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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Are Firms Ignorant About BYOD Issues?

Are Firms Ignorant About BYOD Issues?Enterprises are being ignorant towards the issues BYOD is causing to their business says backup vendor Acronis. James Rawbone, Senior Partner Account Manager EMEA, Enterprise Mobility Solutions at Acronis, shared his opinions with Desire Athow at ITProPortal on why and how enterprises are being ignorant towards BYOD issues.

Acronis logoThe Acronis 2013 Global Data Protection Trend Report developed by the Ponemon Institute identified five surprising BYOD trends:

1. There are big gaps in secure BYOD policies across organizations. The Acronis survey found that 60% of businesses have no personal device policy in place, and those with policies 24% make exceptions for executives, who are most likely handling the most sensitive corporate data. As a result, these organizations are increasingly vulnerable to data loss and serious compliance issues.

2.Simple security precautions are not being adopted. The survey found only 31% of companies mandate a device password or key lock on personal devices, and only 21% do remote device wipes when employees leave the company, drastically increasing the risk for data leakage.

3.Businesses underestimate the dangers of public clouds. The researchers report that corporate files are commonly shared through third-party cloud storage solutions such as DropBox, but 67% of organizations don’t have a policy in place around public clouds and 80% haven’t trained employees in the correct use of these platforms.

compatibility and interoperability are still big obstacles4.The growth of Apple (AAPL) devices is complicating BYOD security for administrators. 65% of organizations will support Macs in the next year, and 57% feel compatibility and interoperability are still big obstacles to getting Macs compliant with their IT infrastructure. This puts data stored and shared across the corporate network and on Apple devices at risk.

5.Some organizations are ignoring the benefits of mobile collaboration altogether. More than 30% surveyed actually forbid personal devices from accessing the network.

 tight budgetsMr. Rawbone sees two reasons organizations are not educating or training their employees on the risks of BYOD. First is time and money. Most companies have tight budgets across the board and in particular within their IT department, as well as their overall staffing. The second excuse for not training their staff is that they are unaware that their staff is using these solutions, or they are turning a blind eye to the issues effect their corporate data and overall IT infrastructure.

The Acronis Senior Partner told ITProPortal there are legal and compliance issues associated with BYOD; but generally BYOD can be adapted to each compliance regulation and rule. The main concern of BYOD is data protection and ensuring that as employees bring devices to-and-from the workplace, confidential corporate data is adequately protected while remaining easily accessible. An important part of data protection, often not addressed by BYOD strategies, includes ensuring that information and records comply with privacy laws like the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX), as well as specific industry and regional privacy regulations.

data protection Mr. Rawbone concludes by reminding the author that the important thing every business needs to remember is that mobile devices can be replaced for a small cost in comparison to having your confidential data stolen and used incorrectly.

Companies need to embrace technological evolution and look at the business benefits of BYOD. Otherwise, he claims they will be facing some serious network and data issues and worst of all potentially facing some legal problems in the coming future.

mobile device security policyCreating a mobile device security policy doesn’t have to be complicated, but it needs to encompass devices, data, and files. The article lists a number of simple things organizations should do, like require users to key-lock their devices with password protection. 68% of those surveyed use VPN or secure gateway connections across networks and systems, and 52% use Microsoft (MSFT) Active Directory and/or LDAP. The simplest place to start is to use device key-lock and password protection.

 

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Palm Now A Chinese Mobile Company

Palm Now A Chinese Mobile CompanyLet’s take a trip on the way-back machine and visit the first cool – gotta-have-it tech toy, the Palm Pilot. I had several versions of the Palm Pilot, The Palm V was the best version, but the  PalmOne-m515 had a color screen. The oft traded PDA builder moved from Palm to modem-maker US Robotics. Which was later purchased by 3Com, and then Handspring. Next, it was PalmOne/Source and finally purchased in 2010 for $1.2 billion by HP, where many tech firms go to die.

Palm logoNow ChinaTechNews.com reports that the Chinese consumer electronics group TCL recently announced that they will acquire the Palm brand. HP is selling Palm as part of Meg Whitman’s struggles to right the floundering HP (HPQ).

Li Dongsheng, chairman of TCL Group, claims the Palm acquisition is different from their purchase of Alcatel’s mobile division. According to the Chinese firm, Palm has its fans in America and its operating ideas are similar to Apple (AAPL). They believe this type of fandom can give Palm strength. Li said the Palm brand still has value in some of the global markets and people expect its re-emergence to continue to offer innovative products.

ChinaAccording to the article, TCL will launch new Palm products at the end of 2015. TLC plans to position Palm as a high-end smartphone brand. Maybe in China, the Palm name is an innovative mobile terminal brand, which will be closely related to users and fans.

Variety reports from CES that TCL said that it will re-create Palm in Silicon Valley. In the statement TCL claims:

Palm has always carried a lot of affect and emotions … That’s why TCL has set the direction to rebuild the brand involving Palm’s very own community, making it the largest scale crowdsourced project ever seen in the industry.

The firm will back the crowdsourced development of new Palm products with 5,000 engineers and seven research and development centers around the world.

Guo Aiping, CEO of TCL Communication, told ChinaTechNews.com that this acquisition is limited to the Palm brand and it does not include other assets such as employees.

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First, another US company sold to the competition. Just saying.

I agree with ArsTechnica they hypothesize this move could be seen as TCL’s attempt to break into the U.S. smartphone market under a well-known brand. Other Chinese companies such as Lenovo, which now owns Motorola, have a similar strategy of operating in America under a well-known brand.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.