| Beyond
the Firewalls
By Karen Epper Hoffman
Effective online security depends
on more than just the latest technology; it also requires
the proper mindset and procedures.
For online banking to reach its full
potential, consumers must overcome their security fears.
And that will be a tall order for financial institutions
to fill.
The problem is that security threats
are increasing rather than receding. The more complex
Internet systems become, the more vulnerable they are.
"Complexity is the enemy of security," says
Brian O'Higgins, chief technology officer for Entrust,
a security software vendor based in Addison, Texas.
The seriousness of this threat was underscored
in late January, when the "SQL Slammer" virus
knocked out corporate servers around the country. Among
the financial service providers affected were Bank of
America Corp., First Data Corp. and Canadian Imperial
Bank of Commerce in Toronto.
Although new security systems are being
introduced all the time, they are never entirely adequate
to deal with all the proliferating threats. The response
required of financial institutions then goes beyond technology
and new security systems to mindset and procedure. Banks
need to incorporate security into all their online planning
and then set up rigorous protocols to identify and quash
potential threats.
Such measures will unfortunately add
to expenses at a time when banks are anxious to squeeze
some profitability out of their online operations. But
the risk of not taking action is grave. Financial and
legal liability can be enormous when criminal elements
or mischief-makers penetrate a bank's customer files.
An institution's very reputation as a safe haven for customer
funds is at stake.
There's also a danger that online banking
will stagnate as a business unless customers can get better
assurances their money is safe. According to a recent
TowerGroup Inc. survey of 3,800 U.S. households, 17% of
consumers still cite security concerns as the primary
reason they don't utilize online banking. Jim Eckenrode,
group research director for consumer banking, says these
security concerns have been a major factor in the disappointing
growth of online bill payment in particular.
With so much at stake, financial institutions
need to consider a range of options for combating online
fraud. These include new types of security systems, such
as biometrics, smart cards and real-time detection devices;
continuous auditing of online systems; careful monitoring
of outsourcers and vendors; and even ongoing education
of customers.
Guard at
the Gate
Online banking today is fairly proficient.
Customers can track their balances, move money between
accounts, pay bills and even research and purchase investment
products. Those advances in capabilities come at a price,
however. More dense and intricate systems mean more potential
for bugs in the software, more vulnerabilities and more
holes to patch in short, a greater security risk.
The shift from a client-server model
to a Web-based network model of computing contributes
to this insecurity by opening more bank infrastructure
to the outside world. As banks make more of their services
and data accessible through the Internet, the easier it
becomes for an unwanted element to break into more sensitive
areas.
Essentially, banks have provided greater
access to their applications without necessarily addressing
underlying security issues, according to Harriet Goldman,
vice president for professional services at Quadrasis,
a Waltham, Mass.-based security solutions unit of Hitachi
Computer Products. "If you get past the guard at
the gate," Goldman says, referring to banks' firewalls
and upfront security, "you've got run of the house."
This increased vulnerability can be
seen across American business. The number of online attacks
against businesses has been doubling for the past few
years with a 142% jump in 2001 alone, according to the
Carnegie Mellon Software Institute. Nearly half (45%)
of IT professionals say U.S. businesses are not prepared
for a major cyber-attack, according to a July 2002 poll
conducted by the Business Software Alliance, while only
1% of experts say that businesses are highly prepared
for such an onslaught.
Since none of these surveys focus on
financial institutions specifically, it's difficult to
gauge the precise dimensions of the threat faced by banks,
or the damage sustained. The most recent annual joint
survey by the San Francisco-based Computer Security Institute
and Federal Bureau of Investigation does show a surge
in online "financial fraud" sustained by a wide
range of businesses, including banks. Respondents to the
2002 survey reported an average loss of $4.6 million,
up from $4.4 million the year before and $1.5 million
in 2000.
Bankers are well aware of the problem.
"We certainly agree that the occurrence of attempts
has increased significantly," says James Wade, chief
information security officer for KeyCorp's technology
services unit in Cleveland.
Counterpane Internet Security of Cupertino,
Calif., is a company that tracks potential online infiltration
for large companies. According to chief marketing officer
John Bruce, financial institutions account for 28% of
Counterpane's business, the security company's second-biggest
client segment, after manufacturing. "There are a
lot of reasons criminals would be attracted to banks,"
Bruce says. "The greatest return is there."
Over the past three years, Counterpane
says it has investigated 200,000 incidents at various
industry Web sites and stopped 30,000 attacks in progress.
While Bruce characterizes banks as generally more "buttoned
down" than other large companies, he asserts that
several successful security breaches of banks have occurred
that "never made the Wall
Street Journal."
Script Kiddies
And where are these threats coming from?
Many come from countries such as Russia, China, Nigeria,
and Vietnam, which possess a cadre of technically trained
people despite impoverished economies, according to Catherine
Allen, chief executive of the Banking Information Technology
Secretariat or BITS, the technology arm of the Financial
Services Roundtable. Pete Murphy, chief information officer
of Birmingham, Ala.-based AmSouth Bancorp, says his team
frequently uncovers would-be foreign infiltrators running
software scans or sweeps of the bank's system looking
for any vulnerabilities to exploit.
The 2002 joint CSI/FBI survey details
a few recent incidents involving Russians. In 2001, for
example, two men from Chelyabinsk, Russia, were able to
access bank accounts at Los Angeles-based Nara Bank and
Central National Bank of Waco, Texas, apparently by penetrating
Internet service providers. In early 2002, another hacker
was able to extort $10,000 from an unnamed "New York
bank" by acquiring account details through an online
service provider.
As these incidents demonstrate, outsourcers
constitute a key area of vulnerability for financial institutions.
Peter J. Baldassaro, Jr., vice president and manager for
the corporate security department of Hibernia Corp. in
New Orleans, stresses the importance of vetting outsource
vendors and conducting regular audits of their performance.
He says bankers should ask how the vendors screen their
employees and manage risks especially those vendors
operating outside U.S. borders.
Atlanta-based S1 Technologies, which
hosts Web services for many mid-tier banks, suffered a
security breach last July, when an unknown hacker broke
into its Austin data center. Chief security officer Terrance
Gattis says S1 initially thought some of its data might
have been compromised, but later found that was not the
case.
The incident did serve as a wake-up
call, however. When S1 talks with clients today, "the
security conversation is a larger part of the discussion,
even in the sales process," says Vic Syracuse, S1's
senior vice president for operations and technology. He
notes that S1 undergoes annual regulatory audits, as well
as more frequent reviews by customers and its own private
auditors. Nonetheless, hackers have attempted to extort
money from the company with threats of compromised data.
"You just have to stay on top of it," Syracuse
says. "It's a war out there."
In addition to criminal threats, banks
have to deal with a growing corps of hackers who infiltrate
computer systems mostly for the fun of it, to cause malicious
mischief. These include "script kiddies," young
hackers who may not know how to write their own code,
but are able to obtain a variety of off-the-shelf viruses.
Smart hackers often publish virus-writing
tools, which these script kiddies can use to wage their
own attacks, such as logic bombs and "denial-of service,"
where hackers distribute "zombie" programs over
the Internet to throngs of other machines and then use
this phantom network to bombard a single Web site and
force its server down. "There's been an increase
in those sorts of attacks," says Allen of BITS, which
is headquartered in Washington, D.C. "It's easy for
people to do."
One of the most dramatic hacker attacks
occurred in late January, when the SQL Slammer virus hit
corporate networks running Microsoft Corp.'s SQL Server
2000 software. Spreading through the networks, rather
than e-mail, the virus exploited a design flaw in the
software to take over communications ports and send copies
of itself to exposed servers. The proliferation of messages
crashed the servers and caused congestion on the Internet
for one weekend. Although not directed specifically at
banks, the attack temporarily knocked out most of BofA's
ATM network, online banking system and call centers and
caused lesser disruption at Greenwood Village, Colo.-based
First Data, the nation's largest credit card processor.
Beyond the
Perimeter
Given all that banks know about the
threats facing them, are they doing enough to limit their
exposure? Reviews are mixed. "Banks are more aware
than the average corporation, for sure," says O'Higgins
of Entrust. "But they still tend to underestimate
the threat."
One problem, she says, is that banks
place too much emphasis on exterior defenses "building
up the perimeter" and don't focus enough on
internal security. For example, banks may invest a lot
of time and money in their firewalls and encryption, but
smart hackers can often find points of intrusion through
less guarded mail ports and other areas of weakness. Once
they're inside, security measures do little to prevent
further compromise. The upshot, O'Higgins says, is that
a bank's online security is like an egg: "a hard
crunchy shell, but soft inside."
When it comes to building a defense
in depth, there are no easy answers or off-the-shelf solutions.
"There's not a single solution that any organization
can put into place to inoculate itself from these problems,"
says KeyCorp's Wade. What is required, rather, is a series
of steps that can work in combination with each other
to reduce the risk. These include, for example, incorporating
security concerns, technologies and protocols earlier
in the online planning process.
"As soon as you start talking about
Web stuff, even before you have something running, you
need to discuss security," says Robert Garigue, vice
president and chief information officer for Bank of Montreal
Financial Group in Toronto.
Security also needs to be a bigger part
of the discussion as sites get updated and new technologies
emerge. For example, the increasing use of instant messaging
has raised questions for banks regarding the safety of
their protocols and the potential for such messages to
cross firewall boundaries in an unsecured fashion. Plotting
out the ramifications of such developments and how to
deal with them is becoming a more important piece of the
job when looking at potential security glitches, according
to Garigue.
In the critical area of authenticating
users, some new technology may help. O'Higgins expects
biometrics and smart cards to play a bigger role in the
future. But today, many banks are still using the same
level of encryption they adopted several years ago, which
has weaknesses. Quadrasis' Goldman, for example, says
most companies have secured their network layer, but not
their application layer, which is where user programs
have access to the resources of the system. Her company,
therefore, focuses on providing tools that integrate security
at that enterprise application layer where so many channels
connect.
Using real-time detection as well as
more automated intrusion detection may be helpful. As
many security experts point out, stopping hackers from
trying to break into a bank's inner sanctum may not be
as feasible as simply finding and stopping them once they
do get in. Hence, methods of detection both automated
and human are becoming more and more key to the
security plan. Mail ports, for example, represent one
area of vulnerability, which has forced many banks to
install intrusion detection software to guard them, says
S1's Gattis.
While hackers have long employed scanning
programs to sniff around a bank's system, looking for
potential fault lines to exploit, this probing has gotten
ever more sophisticated with time. Hackers are probing
for vulnerabilities within the architecture itself, making
the simple issue of how a bank shields its application
servers all the more critical. "You want to make
sure they can't open the window even a crack," says
Tom Cable, chief executive of Atlanta-based NetBank Inc.
When intruders do get in, banks can
turn to vendors such as Counterpane, whose software reviews
a company's online network logs in real time, looking
for any potentially malicious tampering. The software
feeds these records back to Counterpane's Washington,
D.C. or Mountain View, Calif. offices to be reviewed by
analysts there.
Continuous
Auditing
This underscores the fact that no matter
how good the technology gets, the real-time human element
is important to nip such a potential threat in the bud.
"The products alone are not keeping up," Bruce
says. "You can't codify a response to this."
To that end, there's a need for careful
and continuous auditing. No matter how confident a bank
or a service provider might feel that they've shored up
their systems against attack, there's always the chance
of someone finding a way in. So it helps to have someone
looking over your shoulder now and again.
While many banks have long used internal
and independent auditors as a means to double-check their
work, the increase in online threats has forced the industry
as a whole to redouble its efforts. To supplement their
quarterly regulatory examinations, for example, many banks
have engaged auditors and private security firms to test
their systems on a more frequent basis.
Ultimately, there's no substitute for
an institution's own relentless focus on security. NetBank's
Cable says it's important to continually review systems,
protocols and software. "It would be pretty naive
to set up your security and think it would be good for
'a while.' "
Banks also need to avoid offering services
that introduce too much security risk. For example, many
banks have felt that allowing customers to access information
over wireless networks is too risky, especially considering
the relatively small demand for such services in the U.S.
Bank of Montreal's Garigue points out that even if a great
business case existed for introducing more advanced wireless
financial services, common wireless protocols are still
"inherently weak in security." Thus, it might
be better to wait for better security protocols.
Last, but not least, institutions should
encourage customers to erect their own safeguards. Customers
play a big role in bank security, whether or not they
realize it. They must be vigilant about protecting information
that could allow a cyber-predator access to their personal
accounts. And they also need to be more wary of becoming
the unwitting pawns of hackers by carrying zombie programs
or viruses to their banks or becoming hot points for more
nefarious activity.
As broadband and its "always-on"
Internet connections becomes more popular, customers are
even more exposed to online security problems. "Banks
haven't publicized the dangers well," says TowerGroup's
Eckenrode. He and other experts say bankers may have to
take on more of a role in educating their customers about
online security in order to protect both themselves and
the customers. It's not just a matter of protecting user
names and passwords. Customers also need to install anti-virus
software and make use of firewalls on their home systems,
especially if they have an always-on connection that could
give hackers more opportunity to plant destructive data.
"Anybody who does business on the
Internet has a responsibility to educate customers about
safe computing practices," says AmSouth's Murphy.
"The challenge is discussing security concerns in
a way the general population can easily understand."
Ms. Hoffman
is a freelance writer based in Poulsbo, Wash.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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