Posted on 01/10/2004 12:20:46 PM PST by Bush2000
Flaws raise red flag on Linux security
But many users remain confident about the security of the open-source environment
Story by Jaikumar Vijayan
JANUARY 09, 2004 ( COMPUTERWORLD ) - A report earlier this week about a critical flaw in the Linux kernel was the latest in a series of recently discovered security problems with the popular open-source operating system. But many users were unfazed by the report and said Linux remains a solid and secure environment for running enterprise applications.
Poland-based iSec Security Research on Monday said it had found a critical flaw in a function used to manage virtual memory on Linux systems (see story). The flaw affects the 2.2, 2.4 and 2.6 versions of the Linux kernel, according to iSec.
The vulnerability could allow attackers to take administrative control of compromised systems and run attack code of their choice, an iSec advisory stated. ISec claimed that it had developed and successfully tested code that was capable of exploiting the flaw, although it added that actually launching such an attack wouldn't be easy.
The news follows the discovery of a similar flaw in the Linux 2.4 kernel last fall. In November, unknown attackers used that flaw to take down several servers belonging to the Debian Project, which produces a noncommercial Linux distribution. And last month, an attack on the Gentoo Linux Project compromised a server that was being used to download copies of Gentoo's Linux source code by users.
The rise in such incidents can be attributed to Linux's growing popularity, which makes it a more attractive target for malicious attackers, said David Wreski, CEO of Linux security vendor Guardian Digital Inc. in Allendale, N.J.
"The underground hacker community is very interested in Linux as a potential target," he said. "Because of the accessibility of the source code to everyone, it provides an equal opportunity for malicious attackers to find vulnerabilities and ways to exploit them."
Even so, Linux remains a secure environment, said John Cahill, senior network security engineer at Piedmont Natural Gas in Charlotte, N.C.
"I would say it is more secure than Microsoft and other environments because the code is looked over by so many people and it's so widely available that any vulnerabilities can be quickly identified and patched," Cahill said. Piedmont uses Linux for several e-mail-related functions and is considering its use for antispam purposes.
"There's not very much we've needed to do to secure Linux [applications]," said Joe Poole, manager for technical support at Boscov's Department Stores LLC in Reading, Pa. The company runs several virtual Linux servers on its mainframes that are protected by network and internal firewalls. All nonessential services, such as file transfers and Telnet, have been disabled. But there has been no need for the kind of constant patching and maintenance required for Windows, Poole said.
Linux distributors in general are also doing a better job of shipping products that have nonessential services disabled by default, said Paul Schmel, adjunct information security officer at the University of Texas at Dallas.
"The biggest plus that Linux has is that it's designed to allow users to be users and not administrators," Schmel said. "What Linux has that Windows doesn't have is ease of configuration from an administrator's standpoint. Stopping and starting services, configuring services to only respond on certain ports and interfaces is dramatically easier than it is with Windows."
Well! I guess that settles that. I'd never use an operating system with flaws. I'm sticking with windows.
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If this is true then why does Windows, where people can't see the source, have even more vulnerabilities?
Do you know of an article that actually details the flaw and how it can be exploited?
These things do happen from time to time, in every operating system. They just don't tend to cause a massive net-slowing wormfest.
Let's face it: It's clear
we were wrong to ever leave
the CP/M world...
You are talking about the dual pane type, right?
giggle.
LVM
And what's with the Linux vitrol of late?
Could it be:
The lack of specifics in this article are typical of what I expect from the microsofties. I didn't know you worked on saturday.
I'd like to point out the rest the folks on the thread who might not be familiar with this particular FUD point. It is major apples to oranges comparison that b2k and other microsoft supporters trot out.
He's attempting to compare just the windows operating system itself, with an entire distribution that includes the OS, various editors, html production software, multiple browsers, firewall software, multiple firewall software, cd/dvd writers, 2 full office suites, web server, and scripting software, games, image editing/creation software and much other stuff that dosn't immediately come to mind. Microsoft doesn't even make software that is comparable with all the software that is included in a standard Red Hat distribution, but if you included everything that they do sell that has a RedHat equivalent, you'll find that the numbers to not compare favorably.
Are you implying that the server security vulnerabilities from the report mistakingly included security vulnerabilities in RedHat's various editors, html production software, multiple browsers, firewall software, multiple firewall software, cd/dvd writers, 2 full office suites, web server, and scripting software, games, image editing/creation software and much other stuff that dosn't immediately come to mind. ...
"...statistics gathered by leading security company SecurityFocus on their NTBugTraq site say differently..."
Note that part of their site name is "NT". How impartial do you think that makes them. In fact, I follow their postings regularly, along with those of several other security sites. The one thing that I have noticed about NTBugTraq is that when there are several interrelated bugs in Microsloth Windows based OS's, they almost always bundle them together as only one event, but in similar situations, on non-Microsloth products, they always create separate incidents. That's the kind of diddling with the numbers that it takes to make Microsloth even appear to be somewhat secure. But, the picture is quite different, when viewed from the trenches.
I have run entire IT departments for very large corporations and have been a US security lead for a major oil company and in all those years, two things have become obvious. First, it not only takes significantly more security support staff to secure and keep secure Microsloth based systems, than any UNIX based systems, including LINUX, but the Microsloth security staff has to be much better trained than their UNIX counterparts. Secondly, even with that larger and better trained support staff, the few successful attacks that we experienced were almost exclusively on Microsloth based systems. At one company, we had one MCSE and two MCSE/MCSA's, who were all security specialists and who did nothing else. Those three highly trained specialists maintained security on one fifth as many servers as our single UNIX security man did and he had only a high school diploma and some practical experience and handled system admin work on several of those UNIX systems, as well. While I was there, we never had a single successful attack on a UNIX (or LINUX) based system, while successful NT attacks, though not common, were far from rare. And that's not even considering the Windows desktop attacks and the additional security staff that we had to deal with those problems.
I am now the Infrastructure Director of a new international natural resources exploration and development company. Some time back, we decided that all of our servers will be UNIX (or LINUX) based and our desktops and laptops will all be Macs (UNIX under the hood). Since we began operating in this environment, we have not had a single security event of any kind. I wonder how many companies can say the same of their Microsloth based networks.
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