Posted November 23rd, 2010 by
rybolov
Joan Goodchild interviewed me about some of my experiences in the big sandbox and how I was good enough at avoiding IEDs to make it there and home again–an abstract form of risk management. Go check it out. And while you’re on the subject or for visuals to go along with the story, check out my Afghanistan set on Flickr, a random set of them are below….
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Posted in Army, Risk Management | 1 Comment »
Tags: risk • security • speaking
Posted November 3rd, 2010 by
rybolov
Go check it out. The project management folks have been jokingly grilled over numerous times for being ~2-3 months late.
However, comments are being accepted until December 2nd. Do yourselves a favor and submit some comments.
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Posted in FISMA, NIST | 2 Comments »
Tags: 800-37 • 800-53 • 800-53A • C&A • catalogofcontrols • certification • cloud • cloudcomputing • compliance • fisma • government • infosec • infosharing • management • NIST • scalability • security
Posted November 2nd, 2010 by
rybolov
Catching you up here with some of the Gov 2.0 kids. Steve Radick wrote an interesting blog post about Government 2.0. And I’m thinking “damn, right on!” Now don’t get me wrong here, sometimes I’m critical of the Gov 2.0 crowd because it seems like about half the time they’re throwing technology and data at people seeing what will stick instead of asking the non-IT program managers what information they need to have to do their job right. But in this case, Steve’s blog post does have relevancy for Government IT security folks.
At this point, you’re probably thinking “But Mr Rybolov, how the heck does this relate to IT security and the Government?” and you’re definitely right to ask. Well, way back in the halcyon days of last year, I came to a realization that tactical and technical security solutions come from the bottom and that compliance and regulation come from the top. I even built a model about it. One of the implied problem areas is that if your management model goes “top-down”, then it gets filtered through bureaucracy.
I was at an AFCEA awards banquet trying to pretend that I wasn’t really a reformed infantryman (think “professional troll”) when Roger Baker gave an awesome talk about “practicing random acts of defiance of the bureaucracy”. I think there’s a bit of genius in that statement. It’s one of the reasons why I blog: as a regular Joe not in the Government, I’m reasonably free to talk about the successes and failures of my friends in the Government where they can’t.
Hence my grand unified theory on life, the universe, and everything else: the InfoSec career field is a lot more like soccer or law enforcement than football and the court system–sometimes we depend on the most junior people who are operating semi-autonomously within their assigned sector. But my point (I know, you’re wondering when I’ll get there) to this whole post is that if we’re going to have a decentralized industry, we also bear the responsibility to train our folks to operate independently and to have the skillset to be well-rounded enough to work in a wide variety of situations.
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Posted in Rants | 2 Comments »
Tags: compliance • government • infosec • management • security
Posted September 29th, 2010 by
rybolov
Ah yes, I’ve explained this about a hundred times this week (at that thing that I can’t blog about, but @McKeay @MikD and @Sawaba were there so fill in the gaps), thought I should get this down somewhere.
the 3 factors that determine how much money you will make (or lose) in a consulting practice:
- Bill Rate: how much do you charge your customers. This is pretty familiar to most folks.
- Utilization: what percentage of your employees’ time is spent being billable. The trick here is if you can get them to work 50 hours/week because then they’re at 125% utilization and suspiciously close to “uncompensated overtime”, a concept I’ll maybe explain in the future.
- Leverage: the ratio of bosses to worker bees. More experienced people are more expensive to have as employees. Usually a company loses money on these folks because the bill rate is less than what they are paid. Conversely, the biggest margin is on work done by junior folks. A highly leveraged ratio is 1:25, a lowly leveraged ratio is 1:5 or even less.
Site Assessment photo by punkin3.14.
And then we have the security assessments business and security consulting in general. Let’s face it, security assessments are a commodity market. What this means is that since most competitors in the assessment space charge the same amount (or at least relatively close to each other), this means some things about the profitability of an assessment engagement:
- Assuming a Firm Fixed Price for the engagement, the Effective Bill Rate is inversely proportionate to the amount of hours you spend on the project. IE, $30K/60 hours=$500/hour and 30K/240 hours = $125/hour. I know this is a shocker, but the less amount of time you spend on an assessment, the bigger your margin but you would also expect the quality to suffer.
- Highly leveraged engagements let you keep margin but over time the quality suffers. 1:25 is incredibly lousy for quality but awesome for profit. If you start looking at security assessment teams, they’re usually 1:4 or 1:5 which means that the assessment vendor is getting squeezed on margin.
- Keeping your people engaged as much as possible gives you that extra bit of margin. Of course, if they’re spending 100% of their time on the road, they’ll get burned out really quickly. This is not good for both staff longevity (and subsequent recruiting costs) and for work quality.
Now for the questions that this raises for me:
- Is there a 2-tier market where there are ninjas (expensive, high quality) and farmers (commodity prices, OK quality)?
- How do we keep audit/assessment quality up despite economic pressure? IE, how do we create the conditions where the ninja business model is viable?
- Are we putting too much trust in our auditors/assessors for what we can reasonably expect them to perform successfully?
- How can any information security framework focused solely on audit/assessment survive past 5 years? (5-10 years is the SWAG time on how long it takes a technology to go from “nobody’s done this before” to “we have a tool to automate most of it”)
- What’s the alternative?
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Posted in Rants, What Doesn't Work | 3 Comments »
Tags: accreditation • auditor • C&A • cashcows • certification • compliance • economics • fisma • government • infosec • management • moneymoneymoney • pci-dss • publicpolicy • security
Posted September 29th, 2010 by
rybolov
So last week Anonymous staged a Distributed Denial of Service against the RIAA, MPAA, and Aiplex over Aiplex’s announcement that they were launching DDoS attacks of their own against torrent sites sharing copyrighted content. In doing a bit of research on techniques that were being used, I came across this wonderful bit of script:
while true; do wget ‘http://riaa.com/goldandplatinumdata.php?table=SEARCH_RESULTS&title=&artist=&label=&format=&category=&type=&awardDescription=&startMonth=1&startYear=0&endMonth=12&endYear=2009&sort=Date&sense=ASC&perPage=5000000000&go=Search’ > /dev/null & done
For those of you who don’t get it just yet, this is an awesome attack to study. Basically what it does is to run an endless loop grabbing a search page url with parameters that will do a huge database query. The beauty of the attack is that it’s “highly leveraged”: for one http get, you generate a sizeable amount of database load. Now multiply that by thousands of yahoos out there running the same script, and it will rollover the target’s database server and possibly the applications servers that query it.
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Posted in Hack the Planet, Technical | 1 Comment »
Tags: ddos • pwnage • scalability • security
Posted September 29th, 2010 by
rybolov
My talking schedule over the next couple of months:
October 25-27: SecTor in Toronto, talking on DDoS and a turbo talk on some of my barcode stuff.
November 8-11: AppSecDC in um… DC, talking on the internal security program for a cloud vendor.
And coming to you, if you give me a call. =)
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Posted in Speaking | No Comments »
Tags: barcode • cloud • cloudcomputing • ddos • management • security • speaking