Trend Cloud Security Blog – Cloud Computing Experts

Offense Must Inform Defense: The Importance of Continuous Monitoring

In light of the introduction yesterday of the seminal Cyber Security Act and the Presidents OP-Ed in the WSJ: Taking the Cyberthreat Seriously. It is time we learn a lesson from those learned by the Federal Government in Cybersecurity. For the last 6 years the United States government has been struggling to determine how nation state and non-state hackers have bypassed perimeter defenses.   After the Comprehensive National Cyber Initiative (CNCI) it was determined that most government agencies over rely on their perimeter defenses. The gauntlet was thrown down to determine how the offensive tactics... read more

Do You Encrypt Your Data? A Plea to Businesses from an Identity Theft Victim

Recently I became a victim of identity theft.  Criminals gained access to my name, address, date of birth, driver’s license number, social security number, and bank account number.  I’ve spent the last 10 years marketing Internet security solutions, but now I know firsthand how painful it can be to individuals when a data breach occurs. How did they get my personal information?  Working in the security industry, I’m pretty careful.  I’m good at recognizing phishing scams; emails that use various ploys to get you to reveal your personal information (see this paper I co-authored on the... read more

Savings with Cloud Security — A Look at the Numbers

When people talk about cloud security it can mean either 1) security for the cloud—security that protects your cloud initiatives, like protection for virtual machines or data stored in the cloud; or 2) security from the cloud such as Security as a Service that uses the cloud to deliver some aspect of protection, like hosted email or web security.  Here, I’d like to focus on security from the cloud that’s delivered in a hybrid model—a cloud-client architecture.  Using the cloud for security can deliver faster threat protection and better security.  Traditional security has relied on signature... read more

Beyond Perimeter Defense to Data-Centric Security

Traditionally businesses have focused their IT security on perimeter defense—blocking threats before they enter the network. This protection is still important.  But with today’s cloud computing, mobile devices, and advanced persistent threats (APTs), businesses need security that protects their data wherever it travels and in whatever type of device it resides, requiring new data-centric security.  Earlier this week, Trend Micro held its annual insight event for the analyst community and announced our new vision on data-centric security (see video clips of the event here and here).  Back... read more

What Are the True Dangers of the Cloud?

We often hear that security and privacy concerns are the main inhibitors to cloud adoption.  But what are the true threats?  Is the cloud really more dangerous than your on-site data center?  I would say that virtualization and cloud computing aren’t inherently more dangerous, but they have unique infrastructure that must be addressed when creating a security foundation.  There are similar attacks across physical, virtual, and cloud infrastructures—data-stealing malware, web threats, spam, phishing, bots, etc. So many companies are tempted to deploy their security for dedicated physical... read more

The State of Cloud and Virtualization Security

For the last few months, we’ve been conducting a cloud, virtualization, and VDI security survey of 1200 IT professionals from larger companies in 6 countries around the world. Not only did I get to help shape the questions on the survey, I’ve also been on the team interpreting the results. We’ve learned more than a few things we actually were not expecting to learn. Here is a collection of the most interesting top findings about the state of cloud and virtualization security. I’ll be blogging about some of them in more detail over the next few weeks, but in the meantime, here is the big... read more

Ambient Cloud News: Skype protocol has been reverse engineered

This is pretty cool. I gave a talk last week at the Glue Conference in Denver about how ambient clouds ( http://cloud.trendmicro.com/good-clouds-evil-clouds-why-microsoft-has… )work and even used Skype as an example of a massive-scale ambient cloud. This case raises some very important new questions around ambient clouds. For instance, if you create an ambient cloud, one that you control using your own protocol, but where you have no control over when an endpoint may join it, what are the legal implications if someone else uses your protocol? In an open source world, slapping a lawsuit on... read more

Chrome OS: So secure we don’t need security?

With the launch announcements of various Google Chrome netbooks, the focus of the press and security companies alike is beginning to take a closer look at the security promises made and also at some of the more ’media friendly‘ statements such as, “…users don’t have to deal with viruses, malware and security updates”.   Let’s have a look at some of the security features of Chrome OS:   1 – Get out of my playpen. Each process runs in its own sandbox.  Effectively this means that if an application is malicious or compromised, it is unable to interact with or otherwise affect... read more

A Tale: The Snack Supplier, the Vending Machine, and the Cloud

I recently had an interesting chat with the operator of our snack vending machine while making a coffee in the kitchen. She was restocking our machine and had her iPad sitting on the table. In their 2 person company they now have 2 iPads and a PC. They do their inventory control and tracking while onsite at customer premises via the iPad. Then they sync it with their PC and, using an online storage solution they transfer it to the cloud; this then syncs with their online accounting package. Her reason was very, very simple: she wants to reduce the amount of time they spend on bookkeeping and back-office... read more

New type of cloud emerges: Exploits as a Service (EaaS)

For years now, if you knew where to shop on the shady side of the Internet cloud, you could pick up a botnet for cheap. But it was so much work to log in to IRC and pay with egold that a busy cybercriminal just couldn’t be bothered. That’s not a problem anymore, thanks to Robopak. Applying the latest cloud provisioning and marketing analytics technologies, they’ve created an entirely new type of cloud service, Exploits as a Service, or EaaS. Robopak’s EaaS lets you pay as little as $30 per day to access Java, PDF, and IE exploits and roll them out to build your cybercrime... read more

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