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Insert presenter logo here on slide master. See hidden slide 2 for directions Deepak Gupta AirTight Networks Wireless Vulnerabilities in the Wild: View.

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Presentation on theme: "Insert presenter logo here on slide master. See hidden slide 2 for directions Deepak Gupta AirTight Networks Wireless Vulnerabilities in the Wild: View."— Presentation transcript:

1 Insert presenter logo here on slide master. See hidden slide 2 for directions Deepak Gupta AirTight Networks Wireless Vulnerabilities in the Wild: View From the Trenches Acknowledgement: Based on work presented by K N Gopinath at RSA 2011

2 Agenda 2 Why care about Wireless Vulnerabilities? (Motivation) What’s new in this talk and what are its implications? Wireless Vulnerability Analysis (Measurements) Threat/Vulnerability Mitigation

3 Era of Wireless Consumerization

4 Real Life Breaches due to Insecure Use of Wi-Fi  Marshalls store hacked via wireless  Hackers accessed TJX network & multiple servers for 18+ months  45.7 million payment credit accounts compromised  Estimated liabilities > 4.5B USD

5 5 Are today’s enterprises secure enough to prevent the recurrence of such attacks?

6 Enter War Driving 6 WPA/WPA2 AP (%) NYLondonParis Not all APs are WPA/WPA2. How many of these are actually connected to my network?

7 War Driving Insufficient for Enterprise Threat Classification Our Study Authorized External Rogue

8 Sensor Based Statistical Sampling Data collected over last two years 8 Total Number ofCount Sites/Locations2,155 Organizations156 Sensors4501 Total Access Points268,383 Enterprise Clients427,308 Threat Instances Analyzed82,681

9 Enterprises Deal With Lot of Non-Enterprise Devices 268,383 APs 80,515 187,868 Authorized External/ Unmanaged 70% APs do NOT belong to the studied Organizations! Similarly, About 87% Clients are Unmanaged/External!

10  Rogue APs  AP mis- configurations  Soft/Client Based APs Wireless Threat Space AP Based Threats AP

11 Adhoc Network Wireless Threat Space Client based threats  Client extrusions Connections to neighbors, evil twins  Adhoc networks  Client bridging  Banned devices

12 T 3 (T-Cube) Parameters Threat Presence Threat Duration Threat Frequency Presence of an instance of a threat (%) Likelihood of presence of a threat instance Window of opportunity for an attacker

13 Real-life data & Accurate picture of Threats How does this information help you? Get an idea of Wi-Fi threat scenario in enterprises that may be like yours Which wireless threats you should worry about first? Plan your enterprise mitigation strategy

14 14 Threat Presence Threat Duration Threat Frequency Threat Frequency Simple (Yes/No) metric based on the presence of an instance of a threat (%)

15 Results From Our Survey Randomly Chosen set of IT Security Professionals Rogue APMisconf. APAdhocClient ExtrusionOther % Response

16 Results Based on Our Data Key Observations -Prominent Threats -Client extrusions -Rogue APs -AP mis-configurations -Adhoc clients Key Implications -Organization data is potentially at risk via Wi-Fi

17 Let’s Dive Deeper into Nature of Threats Rogue APs Client Extrusions Adhoc Clients

18 Enterprise Wireless Consumerization: Rogue APs 1521 Rogue APs seen in our study 163 Different type of Consumer Grade OUIs seen

19 Rogue AP Details About 1 in 10 Rogue APs have Default SSIDsAbout Half of Rogue APs Wide Open

20 Rogue AP Details An open Rogue AP is Virtually THIS!

21 Client Consumerization: Client Extrusion Client (Smartphones & laptops both) probes for these SSIDs.

22 Topic of Hot Discussion Today!

23 23

24 Client Probing For Vulnerable SSIDs Retail/SMB Organizations 118,981 Clients 12,002 106,979 AuthorizedUnmanaged 21,777 (20.4%) 636 (5.3%) Power of Accurate threat classification. 5.3% Vs 20.4%

25 “Known” Vulnerable SSIDs Probed For 103 distinct SSIDs recorded Certain (8%) Authorized Clients Probing for 5 or more SSIDs

26 Adhoc Authorized Clients! 565 distinct Adhoc SSIDs found, About half of them Vulnerable 15% of these are default SSIDs. 26,443 (7%) clients in adhoc mode.

27 VIDEO DEMO: Smartpot MITM Attack So What? Illustrative Exploit via Client Extrusion Smartphone as an Attacker App1: Mobile Hotspot App2: SSLStrip Attack Tool

28 VIDEO DEMO: Smartpot MITM Attack 28

29 29 Threat Presence Threat Duration Threat Frequency Threat Frequency How long (time interval) a threat is active before removal?

30 AP Threats live “longer” than Client Threats 15% client threats & 30 % AP threats live for > hr Threat Duration % Threat Instances with Given Threat Duration Histogram indicating that AP threats live longer AP Misconf. Rogue AP Client Extrusion Adhoc networks Some AP based threats are active for a day or more! Data from SMB/Retail (PCI) Segment

31 31 Threat Presence Threat Duration Threat Frequency Threat Frequency Threat instances per Sensor per month

32 Threat Frequency Large Enterprise Segment: Threats Per Month Per Sensor (Approx. 10,000 sq feet area) Bigger your organization, higher the likelihood of finding the threats Threat Category Threat Frequency

33 Key Takeaways Summarized  Wireless threats due to unmanaged devices are present  Enterprise wireless environment influenced by consumerization  Certain threats more common than others  Client extrusions  Rogue AP  AP Mis-configurations  Adhoc clients  Common threats affect large enterprise and SMB organizations  Wireless threats persist regardless of sophistication of wired network security

34 34 Threat Mitigation

35 Let’s Ban Wi-Fi!

36 Use WPA2 For Your Authorized WLAN! But, WPA2 does not protect against threats due to unmanaged devices

37 Threat Mitigation Intrusions (AP Based Threats)  Wire side controls as a first line of defense (e.g., 802.1X port control)  Wireless IPS to automatically detect & block intrusions Extrusions (Client Based Threats)  Educate users: clean up profiles, Use VPNs & connect to secure Wi-Fi  Deploy end point agents to automatically block connections to insecure Wi-Fi  Wireless IPS to automatically detect & block extrusions in enterprise perimeter Regular wireless scans to understand your security posture - Cloud based solutions are available to automate wireless scans Defense-In-Depth Mitigation

38 Apply Slide: Recommended Best Practices  Self Assessment Test  Scan your network to find out how vulnerable you are  Good chance that you will find a Rogue AP, higher chance that you will find client extrusion  Follow best practices  Educate your users to connect to secure Wi-Fi  Use VPN for remote connections  Clean up the Connection profiles of Wi-Fi clients periodically  Deploy end point agents to automate some of the above  Adopt a “defense in depth” security approach  Employ wire side defenses against Rogue APs (first line of defense)  Regularly scan your wireless perimeter  If risk assessment is high and/or you store super sensitive data  Threat containment via wireless IPS should be considered

39 Apply Slide: Recommended Best Practices Go Wi-Fi, But, The Safe Way!

40 40 Questions? Thank You deepak.gupta@airtightnetworks.com

41 A1: Location/Site Wise Distribution Key Observations Prominent threats are distributed across multiple sites. Key Implications You need an ability to monitor the entire organization, not just 1 or 2 sites

42 A2: Enterprise Vs PCI (SMB/Retail) Key Observations Similar pattern with respect to prominent threats Some difference w.r.t other threats Increased adhoc connections in PCI

43 A3: North America, Asia (Overall Threat Occurrence)


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