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USC CSci499 Security Systems Lecture notes – Spring 2013

USC CSci499 Security Systems Lecture notes – Spring 2013. Dr. Jelena Mirkovic University of Southern California Information Sciences Institute. Class home page. http ://ccss.usc.edu /499 Syllabus Assignments News Lecture notes Keep checking it!. Contact. Instructor

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USC CSci499 Security Systems Lecture notes – Spring 2013

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  1. USC CSci499Security Systems Lecture notes – Spring 2013 Dr. Jelena Mirkovic University of Southern California Information Sciences Institute

  2. Class home page • http://ccss.usc.edu/499 • Syllabus • Assignments • News • Lecture notes • Keep checking it!

  3. Contact • Instructor • Dr. Jelena Mirkovic • Office hours Fri 1-2pm or by apptin SAL214/216 • Contact via email (on class web page)

  4. Grading • Grading: • CTF exercises: 20% • Homeworks:  20% • Quizzes: 5% • Participation:  5% • Midterm Exam: 20% • Final Exam: 30% • Grades assigned using an absolute curve:

  5. Homeworks • Done on DeterLabtestbed • I will open an account for each of you after the class • You will get an automated email how to log on • Your assignment for the next class – read through the tutorial (at http://www.deterlab.net) and run a sample experiment to learn how to use DeterLab • We’ll have 4 homeworks, each carries 5% of your grade • Ask for help early • Do NOT email testbed ops, I can help with all DeterLab issues

  6. Capture-the-Flag Exercises • Done on DeterLabtestbed • Blue team develops some technology, Red team attacks it • Everyone will have a chance to be on both teams • Each exercise will be performed in class, each carries 10% of your grade • I’m not looking for extraordinary solutions (although they are welcome) but for good integration of what you learned in class and what you managed to learn off the Internet • Teamwork is important

  7. Quizzes • Done before each homework exercise • Repeated after the exercise • You MUST take each quiz • Total 5% of your grade

  8. Midterm and Final • Closed book, closed notes • Each last 1 h 20 min • We will have reviews in class before each

  9. Class Participation • Class participation is important • Ask and answer questions in class • Ask, answer, participate on-line • Class participation carries 5% of your grade

  10. DEN • DEN system will host the class discussion board • To gain access and log inhttps://mapp.usc.edu/ • Contact webclass@usc.edu if you have difficulty with the system • I will check the discussion board once daily but if you want a reliable response from me email me directly

  11. Academic Integrity • What is and is not OK • I encourage you to work with others to learn the material but everyone must DO their work ALONE • Do not to turn in the work of others • Do not give others your work to use as their own • Do not plagiarize from others (published or not) • Do not try to deceive the instructor • See the Web site • More guidelines on academic integrity • Links to university resources • Ask if in doubt • You can always ask me for help!

  12. What Does Security Mean?

  13. What Does Security Mean?… In Real Life • No one should be able to: • Break into my house • Attack me • Steal my TV • Use my house to throw water balloons on people • Damage my furniture • Pretend to be my friend Bob and fool me • Waste my time with irrelevant things • Prevent me from going to my favorite restaurant • Destroy my road, bridge, city ..

  14. What Does Security Mean?…wrt Computers and Nets • No one should be able to: • Break into my computer • Attack my computer • Steal my information • Use my computer to attack others • Damage my computer or data • Use my resources without my permission • Mess with my physical world • I want to talk to Alice • Pretend to be Alice or myself or our computers • Prevent me from communicating with Alice

  15. Computer vs. Network Security • An isolated computer has a security risk? • Computer security aims to protect a single, connected, machine • Networking = communication at all times and in all scenarios!!! • Network security aims to protect the communication and all its participants • Security = robustness or fault tolerance? Computer security Network security

  16. Security Properties • Confidentiality (C) • Keep data secret from non-participants • Integrity (I) • Aka “authenticity” • Keep data from being modified • Keep it functioning properly • Availability (A) • Keep the system running and reachable

  17. Orthogonal Aspects • Policy • Deciding what confidentiality, integrity and availability mean • Mechanism • Implementing the policy

  18. Security Goals • Attack prevention • It is impossible for the attack to succeed • Attack detection • Low false positives, false negatives and detection delay • Attack response • Retaliation, observation, recovery • Attack recovery • Remedy the effects of the attack or sustain it A false positive is when the system detects an attack, but the attack did not occur. A false negativeis when the attack is missed by the system.

  19. What Does Security Mean?…wrt Computers and Nets • No one should be able to: • Break into my computer – A, C, I • Attack my computer – A, C, I • Steal my information - C • Use my computer to attack others – I? • Damage my computer or data - I • Use my resources without my permission – A • Mess with my physical world – I, A • I want to talk to Alice • Pretend to be Alice or myself or our computers – C, I • Prevent me from communicating with Alice - A

  20. What Are the Threats? • Breaking into my computer • Hackers • Break a password or sniff it off the network • Exploit a vulnerability • Use social engineering • Impersonate someone I trust • Viruses and worms A vulnerability is a weakness in the system (its design, implementation or use procedures) that when exploitedmakes it behave in a way that system’s creator did not expect. An exploitis a set of steps that exercises the vulnerability

  21. What Are the Threats? • Attacking my computer • Denial-of-service attacks • Viruses and some worms A DOS attack aims to disrupt a service by either exploiting a vulnerability or by sending a lot ofbogus messages to a computer offering a service A virus is a self-replicating program that requiresuser action to activate such as clicking on E-mail,downloading an infected file or inserting an infectedfloppy, CD, etc ..A worm is a self-replicating program that does notrequire user action to activate. It propagates itselfover the network, infects any vulnerable machine itfinds and then spreads from it further.

  22. What Are the Threats? • Stealing my information • From my computer or from communication • I will use cryptography! • There are many ways to break ciphers • There are many ways to divulge partial information (e.g. who do you talk to) • I would also like to hide who I talk to and when • I will use anonymization techniques • Anonymization hinders other security approaches that build models of normal traffic patterns

  23. What Are the Threats? • Using my machine to attack others • E-mail viruses • Worms • Denial-of-service attacks (including reflector attacks) • Spam, phishing

  24. What Are the Threats? • Damaging my computer or data • I have to prevent break-ins • I will also use cryptography to detect tampering • I must replicate data to recover from tampering • Denial-of-service attacks and worms can sometimes damage computers

  25. What Are the Threats? • Taking up my resources with irrelevant messages • Denial-of-service attacks • Spam mail (takes time to read and fills space) • Viruses and worms

  26. What Are the Threats? • Messing up with my physical world • Cyber-physical attacks or collateral victims • Power systems, traffic control, utilities • Travel agencies • Medical devices • Smart vehicles

  27. What Are the Threats? • Pretending to be Alice or myself or our computers • I want to be sure who I am talking to (authentication and digital signatures) • It is hard to impersonate a computer in two-way communication, such as TCP • But it has been done • Plain IP spoofing seems an extremely hard problem to solve IP spoofing means putting a fake IP address in thesender field of IP packets.

  28. What Are the Threats? • Preventing me from communicating with Alice • Alice could be attacked • Routers could be overloaded or tampered with • DNS servers could be attacked

  29. Some Security Mechanisms • VPNs • Intrusion Detection • Intrusion Response • Virus scanners • Policy managers • Trusted hw • Encryption • Checksums • Key management • Authentication • Authorization • Accounting • Firewalls

  30. What Are the Challenges? • Your security frequently depends on others • Tragedy of the Commons • A good solution must • Handle the problem to a great extent • Handle future variations of the problem, too • Be inexpensive • Have economic incentive • Require a few deployment points • Require non-specific deployment points

  31. What Are the Challenges? • Fighting a live enemy • Security is an adversarial field • No problem is likely to be completely solved • New advances lead to improvement of attack techniques • Researchers must play a double role

  32. What Are the Challenges? • Attack patterns change • Often there is scarce attack data • Testing security systems requires reproducing or simulating legitimate and traffic • No agreement about realistic traffic patterns • No agreement about metrics • There is no standardized evaluation procedure • Some security problems require a lot of resources to be reproduced realistically

  33. Practical Considerations • Risk analysis and risk management • How important it is to enforce a policy • Which threats matter • Legislation may play a role • The role of trust • Assumptions are necessary • Human factors • The weakest link

  34. In The Shoes of an Attacker • Who are the attackers • Used to be teenage hackers (bragging rights) • Now organized criminal (for profit) • Political organizations • Risk to the attacker • Usually very small

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