 |
Additional considerations when performing
the next audit of your external facing
network
By: Mitchell H. Levine, CISA
-
Audit Serve, Inc.
Audit Serve Seminars
Hidden Secrets from IT Auditors
Pittsburgh January 12, 2009 * Phoenix September
14 - 15, 2009
How to Perform an
Integrated Audit
Boston December 16, 2008 * Tampa February 12, 2009
* Hartford February 18, 2009 * Minneapolis April 6 - 7, 2009
Network audits have always been a high priority within most internal
audit departments. Unfortunately these audits require extensive
technical expertise to actually carry out these audits effectively. In
addition, the scope of these audits varies within the industry. For the
purpose of this article, the Network Audit will focus on external facing
components such as firewalls, routers, SMTP (email) servers, FTP
Servers, Web Servers and VPN Concentrators.
The primary focus of the audit of these components is to ensure that
most recent security patches has been applied at the server level and
all other operating services used by these components. In addition,
there are known industry vulnerabilities based on certain services used
which have been replaced by upgraded services such as SSLv3 replacing
SSLv2. The second part of the review is to ensure that each of these
components has been secured which is comprised of security access rules
and individual security parameters. Instead of an auditor having to
develop technical expertise for each of these types of external facing
components, consideration should be made for the audit department to
license vulnerability assessment tools to serve as the compliance test
to determine whether these components have been patched, secured and are
not running services which have known vulnerabilities. It should be
known that running a vulnerability assessment against these components
does not cover all potential audit areas.
Many
organizations already subscribe to a service with a security vendor or
perform this function internally to scan their external facing devices
on a periodic basis. In this case, the audit department could use the
results of these scans to support their compliance testing relating to
the secured deployment of external facing devices. One additional
audit step should be to ensure that these external scans are reviewed to
identify the “true” vulnerabilities. As part of the process of
generating the vulnerability scan reports, a review needs to be
conducted to identify false positives. In order to certify a
vulnerability as being a false positive, additional internal validations
need to be performed. In addition, these vulnerability assessment tools
identify insignificant issues that should excluded from subsequent
scans. Overall, the auditor should review the management review process
of these scans to ensure that issues are being addressed in a timely
basis and are not being ignored and therefore do not reappear on
subsequent scans.
The most important area which should be included in an external facing
Network Audit is the review of the remote access which is granted to the
staff working remotely. VPN access is typically comprised of
establishing secured tunnels into the corporate network which requires
holes to be made within the Firewall to support these connections. For
larger organizations, VPN concentrators are used to handle a very large
number of VPN tunnels. When using a VPN concentrator, access profiles
can be established which limits the paths that the user can travel
inside the corporate network. The Auditor needs to determine whether
these outside connections are being restricted to only those hosts which
actually need to be accessed remotely by the individual based on the
requirements of their job function.
The audit of the external access via VPN also needs to determine whether
an additional level of security is required for users to remotely
connect to the network. At a minimum, the VPN client should require an
additional logical security to connect to the internal network.
Otherwise, the user would just require the IP address of the device
(i.e., VPN concentrator) which handles the remote connection.
Additional controls can be established to limit which staff members can
use this remote access facility by interfacing the VPN concentrator to
Windows Active Directory. For organizations which want a establish
level of control over remote access, two-factor authentication should be
consider which can be interfaced with the VPN concentrator. For those
organizations which do not have strong evasive action controls for logon
security, whereby a userid requires an administrator reset when the
invalid logon attempt thresholds are exceeded, allowing remote access
further compounds the risk.
Requirements 1 & 2 of the Payment Card Industry (PCI) Data Security
Standard, provides additional test procedures which should be considered
when performing a network audit
https://www.pcisecuritystandards.org/pdfs/pci_audit_procedures_v1-1.pdf
________________ _________________________________________________________
Mitchell Levine is the founder of Audit
Serve, Inc. Audit Serve performs PCI Assessment and Remediation Project
Management consulting services. Audit Serve also conducts Integrated &
IT Audits, SOX Control Design & Testing. Email Mr. Levine at
Levinemh@auditserve.com if you would
like to discuss your organization's specific project requirements in
order to establish a proposal of services.
Copyright 2008, Audit Serve, Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction, which includes links from other Web sites, is prohibited except by
permission in writing.
This article appeared in a past issue of the Audit Vision
E-Mail Newsletter.
|