Dana Gardner: Welcome to the next edition of BriefingsDirect. I’m Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions, your host and moderator.
When it comes to securing systems and data, the bad guys are constantly upping their games -- finding new ways to infiltrate businesses and users. Those who protect systems from these cascading threats must be ever vigilant for new technical advances in detection and protection. In fact, they must out-innovate their assailants.
Today’s BriefingsDirect security
insights discussion examines the relationship between security and
virtualization. We will now delve into how adaptive companies are finding ways
to leverage their virtualization environments to become more resilient, more
intelligent, and how they can protect themselves in new ways.
To learn how to ensure that virtualized
data centers do not pose risks -- but in fact prove more defensible -- we are
joined by two security-focused executives.
Roemer |
Kurt Roemer: Thanks, Dana.
Gardner: We’re also
here with Harish Agastya, Vice
President for Enterprise Solutions at Bitdefender. Welcome, Harish.
Harish Agastya: Hello, Dana.
Gardner: Kurt, virtualization
has become widespread and dominant within data centers over the past decade. At
that same time, security has risen to the very top of IT leadership’s concerns.
What is it about the simultaneous rise of virtualization and the rise of
security concerns? Is there any intersection? Is there any relationship that
most people may miss?
Soup to nuts security
Roemer: The rise of virtualization and security has been concurrent.
A lot of original deployments for virtualization technologies were for remote
access, but they were also for secure
remote access. The apps that people needed to get access to remotely were
usually very substantial applications for the organization -- things like order processing or partner
systems; they might have been employee access to email or internal timecard systems.
These were things that you didn’t really want an attacker messing with -- or arbitrary
people getting access to.
Security has grown from just providing
basic access to virtualization to really meeting a lot of the risks of these virtualized
applications being exposed to the Internet in general, as well as now expanding
out into the cloud. So, we have had to grow security capabilities to be able to
not only keep up with the threat, but try to keep ahead of it as well.
Security has grown from just providing
basic access to virtualization to really meeting a lot of the risks of these virtualized
applications being exposed to the Internet in general, as well as now expanding
out into the cloud.
Gardner: Hasn’t it historically
been true that most security prevention technologies have been still focused at
the operating system (OS)-level, not so much at the virtualization level? How
has that changed over the past several years?
Roemer: That’s a good
question. There have been a lot of technologies that are associated with
virtualization, and as you go through and secure and harden your virtual
environments, you really need to do it from the hardware level, through the hypervisor, through the
operating system level, and up into the virtualization system and the applications
themselves.
We are now seeing people take a much
more rigorous approach at each of those layers, hardening the virtualization
system and the OS and integrating in all the familiar security technologies
that we’re used to, like antivirus, but also going through and providing for application-specific
security.
So if you have a SAP system or something else where
you need to protect some very sensitive company data and you don’t want that
data to be accessed outside the office arbitrarily, you can provide very set
interfaces into that system, being able to control the clipboard or copy and
paste, what peripherals the application can interface with; i.e., turn off the
camera, turn off the microphone if it’s not needed, and even get down to the level
of with the browser, whether things like JavaScript is enabled or Flash is
available.
So it helps to harden the overall
environment and cut down on a lot of the vulnerabilities that would be inherent
by just leaving things completely wide open. One of the benefits of
virtualization is that you can get security to be very specific to the
application.
Gardner: Harish, now
that we are seeing this need for comprehensive security, what else is it that
people perhaps don’t understand that they can do in the virtualization layer?
Why is virtualization still uncharted territory as we seek to get even better
security across the board?
Let’s get better than
physical
Agastya |
There is a wave of innovation among security vendors in this space. How do we run resource-intensive
security workloads in a way that does not compromise the service-level
agreements (SLAs) that those information technology operations (IT Ops) administrators
need to deliver?
There is a lot
of work happening to offload security-scanning mechanisms on to dedicated
security virtual appliances, for example. Bitdefender has been working withpartners like Citrix to enable that.
Now, the huge
opportunity is to take that story further in terms of being able to provide
higher levels of visibility, detection, and prevention from the attacks of
today, which are advanced persistent threats. We seek to detect how they manifest
in the data center and -- in a virtual environment -- what you have the
opportunity to do, and how you can respond. That game is really changing now.
Gardner: Kurt, is there something about the
ability to spin up virtualized environments, and then take them down that provides
a risk that the bad guys can target or does that also provide an opportunity to
start fresh: To eliminate vulnerabilities, or learn quickly and adapt quickly?
Is there something about the rapid change that virtualization enables that is a
security plus?
Persistent
protection anywhere
Roemer: You really
hit on the two sides of the coin. On one side, virtualization does oftentimes
provide an image of the application or the applications plus OS that could be
fairly easy for a hacker to steal and be able to spin up offline and be able to
get access to secrets. So you want to be able to protect your images, to make
sure that they are not something that can be easily stolen.
On the other
side, having the ability to define persistence -- what do you want to have to
persist between reboots versus what’s non-persistent -- allows you to have a
constantly refreshed system. So when you reboot it, it’s exactly back to the
golden image -- and everything is as it should be. As you patch and update you
are working with a known quantity as opposed to the endpoint where somebody
might have administrative access and it has installed personal applications and
plug-ins to their browser and other things like that that you may or may not want
to have in placer.
The nice thing with virtualization is that it’s independent of the OS,
the applications, the endpoints, and the varied situations that we all access our
apps and data from.
Layering also comes into play and helps
to make sure that you can dynamically layer in applications or components of
the OS, depending on what’s needed. So if somebody is accessing a certain set
of functionality in the office, maybe they have 100% functionality. But when
they go home, because they are no longer in a trusted environment or maybe not working
on a trusted PC from their home system, they get a degraded experience, seeing fewer
applications and having less functionality layered onto the OS. Maybe they can’t
save to local drives or print to local printers. All of that’s defined by
policy. The nice thing with virtualization is that it’s independent of the OS,
the applications, the endpoints, and the varied situations that we all access our
apps and data from.
Gardner: Harish, with virtualization that there
is a certain level of granularity as to how one can manage their security
environment parameters. Can you expand on why having that granular capability
to manage parameters is such a strong suit, and why virtualization is a great
place to make that happen?
On
the move, virtually
Agastya: That is one
of the opportunities and challenges that security solutions need to be able to
cope with.
As workloads
are moving across different subgroups, sub-networks, that virtual machine (VM) needs to have
a security policy that moves with it. It depends on what type of application is
running, and it is not specific to the region or sub-network that that
particular VM is resident on. That is something that security solutions that
are designed to operate in virtual environments have the ability to do.
Security moves
with the workload, as the workload is spawned off and new VMs are created. The
same set of security policies associated with that workload now can protect
that workload without needing to have a human step in and determine what
security posture needs to belong to that VM.
See the IDC White Paper, Hypervisor Introspection: A Transformative Approach to Advanced Attack Detection.
That is the opportunity that virtualization provides. But it’s also a challenge. For example, maybe the previous generations of solutions predated all of this. We now need to try and address that.
We love the
fact that virtualization is happening and that it has become a very elastic
software-defined mechanism that moves around and gives the IT operations people
so much more control. It allows an opportunity to be able to sit very well in
that environment and provide security that works tightly integrated with the virtualization
layer.
Gardner: I hear this so much these days that IT
operations people are looking for more automation, and more control.
Kurt, I think
it’s important to understand that when we talk about security within a virtualization
layer, that doesn’t obviate the value of security that other technologies
provide at the OS level or network level. So this isn’t either-or, this is an
augmentation, isn’t that correct, when we talk about virtualization and
security?
The
virtual focus
Roemer: Yes, that’s
correct. Virtualization provides some very unique assets that help extend
security, but there are some other things that we want to be sure to focus on
in terms of virtualization. One of them is Bitdfender Hypervisor
Introspection (HVI). It’s the ability for the hypervisor to provide a set
of direct inspect application programming interfaces (APIs) that allow for
inspection of guest memory outside of the guest.
When you look
at Windows or Linux guests that are running on a hypervisor, typically when you
have tried to secure those it’s been through technology installed in the guest.
So you have the guest that’s self-protecting, and they are relying on OS APIs
to be able to effect security. Sometimes that works really well and sometimes
the attackers get around OS privileges and are successful, even with security
solutions in place.
One of the
things that HVI does is it looks for the techniques that would be associated
with an attack against the memory of the guest from outside the guest. It’s not
relying on the OS APIs and can therefore catch attacks that otherwise would
have slipped past the OS-based security functionality.
Gardner: Harish, maybe you can tell us about
how Citrix and Bitdefender are working together?
Step
into the breach, together
Agastya: The solution
is Bitdefender HVI. It works tightly with Citrix’s XenServer hypervisor,
and it has been available in a controlled release for the last several months.
We have had some great customer traction on it. At Citrix Synergy this year wewill be making that solution generally available.
We have been
working together for the last four years to bring this groundbreaking
technology to the market.
What is the
problem we are trying to solve? It is the issue of advanced attacks that hit
the data center when, as Kurt mentioned, advanced attackers are able to skirt
past endpoint security defense mechanisms by having root access and operating
at the same level of privilege as the endpoint security that may be running
within the VM.
They can then essentially
create a blind spot where the attackers can do anything they want while the
endpoint security solution continues to run.
See the IDC White Paper, Hypervisor Introspection: A Transformative Approach to Advanced Attack Detection.
These types of
attacks stay in the environment and the customer suffers on average 200 days
before a breach is discovered. The marketplace is filled with stories like this
and it’s something that we have been working together with Citrix to address.
The
fundamental solution leverages the power of the hypervisor to be able to
monitor attacks that modify memory. It does that by looking for the common
attack mechanisms that all these attackers use, whether it’s buffer overflows
or it’s heap spraying, the list goes on.
They all
result in memory modification that the endpoint security solution within the VM
is blinded to. However, if you are leveraging the direct inspect APIs that Kurt
talked about -- available as part of Citrix’s XenServer solution – then we have
the ability to look into that VM without having a footprint in there. It is a completely
agentless solution that runs outside the security virtual appliance. It monitors
all of the VMs in the data center against these types of attacks. It allows you
to take action immediately, reduces the time to detection and blocks the
attack.
Gardner: Kurt, what are some of the major
benefits for the end-user organization in deploying something like HVI? What is
the payback in business terms?
Performance
gains
Roemer: Hypervisor
Introspection, which we introduced in XenServer 7.1, allows an organization to
deploy virtualization with security technologies behind it at the hypervisor
level. What that means for the business is that every guest you bring up has
protection associated with it. Even if it’s a new version of Linux that you
haven’t previously tested and you really don’t know which antivirus you would
have integrated with it; or something that you are working on from an appliance
perspective -- anything that can run on XenServer would be protected through
these direct inspect APIs, and the Bitdefender HVI solution. That’s really
exciting.
It also has performance benefits because you don’t have to run antivirus in every guest at the same level. By knowing what’s being protected at the hypervisor level, you can configure for a higher level of performance.
Now, of course, we always recommend having antivirus in guests, as you still have file-based access and so you need to look for malware, and sometimes files get emailed in or out or produced, and so having access to the files from an anti-malware perspective is very valuable.
It also has performance benefits because you don’t have to run antivirus in every guest at the same level. By knowing what’s being protected at the hypervisor level, you can configure for a higher level of performance.
Now, of course, we always recommend having antivirus in guests, as you still have file-based access and so you need to look for malware, and sometimes files get emailed in or out or produced, and so having access to the files from an anti-malware perspective is very valuable.
So for the
business, HVI gives you higher security, it gives you better performance, and
the assurance that you are covered.
But you may need to cut down some of the scanning
functionality and be able to meet much higher performance objectives.
Gardner: Harish, it sounds like this ability to gain
introspection into that hypervisor is wonderful for security and does it in
such a way that it doesn’t degrade performance. But it seems to me that there
are also other ancillary benefits in addition to security, when you have that
ability to introspect and act quickly. Is there more than just a security
benefit, that the value could go quite a bit further?
The
benefits of introspection
Agastya: That’s true.
The ability to introspect into memory has huge potential in the market. First
of all, with this solution right now, we address the ability to detect advanced
attacks, which is a very big problem in the industry -- where you have
everything from nation-sponsored attacks to deep dark web, malicious
components, attack components available to common citizens who can do bad things
with them.
The
capability to reduce that window to advanced attack detection is huge. But now
with the power of introspection, we also have the ability to inject, on the fly,
into the VM, additional solutions tools that can do deep forensics, measure network
operations and the technology can expand to cover more. The future is bright
for where we can take this between our companies.
Gardner: Kurt,
anything to add on the potential for this memory introspection capability?
Specific, secure browsers
Roemer: There are a couple things to add. One is taking a look at
the technologies and just rolling back through a lot of the exploits that we
have seen, even throughout the last three months. There have been exploits
against Microsoft Windows, exploits against Internet Explorer and Edge,
hypervisors, there’s been EternalBlue and the Server
Message Block (SMB) exploits.
You can go back and be able to try these out against the solution and be able
to see exactly how it would catch them, and what would have happened to your
system had those exploits actually taken effect.
If
you have a team that is doing forensics and trying to go through and determine
whether systems had previously been exploited, you are giving that team
additional functionality to be able to look back and see exactly how the
exploits would have worked. Then they can understand better how things would
have happened within their environment. Because you are doing that outside of
the guest, you have a lot of visibility and a lot of information you otherwise
wouldn't have had.
One
big expanded use-case here is to get the capability for HVI between Citrix and
Bitdefender in the hands of your security teams, in the hands of your forensics
teams, and in the hands of your auditors -- so that they can see exactly what
this tool brings to the table.
See the IDC White Paper, Hypervisor Introspection: A Transformative Approach to Advanced Attack Detection.
Something
else you want to look at is the use-case that allows users to expand what they
are doing and makes their lives easier -- and that's secured browsing.
Today,
when people go out and browse the Internet or hit a popular application like
Facebook or Outlook Web Access -- or if you have an administrator who is hitting
an administrative console for your Domain Name System (DNS) environment,
your routers, your Cisco, Microsoft environments, et cetera, oftentimes they
are doing that via a web browser.
One
big expanded use-case here is to get the capability for HVI between Citrix and
Bitdefender in the hands of your security teams.
Well,
if that's the same web browser that they use to do everything else on their PC,
it's over-configured, it presents excessive risk, and you now have the
opportunity with this solution to publish browsers that are very specific to each
use.
For
example, you publish one browser specifically for administrative access, and you
know that you have advanced malware detection. Even if somebody is trying to
target your administrators, you are able to thwart their ability to get in and
take over the environments that the administrators are accessing.
As
more things move to the browser -- and more very sensitive and critical
applications move to the cloud -- it's extremely important to set up secured
browsing. We strongly recommend doing this with XenServer and HVI along with
Bitdefender providing security.
Agastya: The problem
in the market with respect to the human who is sitting in front of the browser
being the weakest link in the chain is a very important one. Many, many
different technology approaches have been taken to address this problem -- and
most of them have struggled to make it work.
The
value of XenApp coming in with its secured browser model is this: You can
stream your browser and you are just presenting, rendering an interface on the
client device, but the browser is actually running in the backend, in the data
center, running on XenServer, protected by Bitdefender HVI. This model not only
allows you to shift the threat away from the client device, but also kill it
completely, because that exploit which previously would have run on the client
device is not on the client device anymore. It’s not even on the server anymore
because HVI has gotten to it and stopped it.
Roemer: I bring up the browser benefit as an example because when you think of the lonely browser today, it is the interface to some of your most critical applications. A browser, at the same time, is also connected to your file system, your network, your Windows registry, your certificate chain and keys -- it’s basically connected to everything you do and everything you have access to in most OSes.
What we are talking about here is publishing a browser that is very specific to purpose and configured for an individual application. Just put an icon out there, users click on it and everything works for them silently in the background. By being able to redirect hyperlinks over to the new joint XenServer-Bitdefender solution, you are not only protecting against known applications and things that you would utilize -- but you can also redirect arbitrary links.
Even if you tell people, “don’t click on any links”, you
know every once in a while it’s going to happen. When that one person clicks on
the link and takes down the entire network, it’s awful. Ransomware attacks
happen like that all the time. With this solution, that arbitrary link would be
redirected over to a one-time use browser. Bitdefender would come up and say,
“Hey, yup, there’s definitely a problem here, we are going to shut this down,”
and the attack never would have had a chance to get anywhere.
What we are talking about here is publishing a browser that
is very specific to purpose and configured for an individual application.
The organization is notified and can take additional remediatative
actions. It’s a great opportunity to really change how people are working and
take this arbitrary link problem and the ransomware problem and neutralize it.
Gardner: It sounds
revolutionary rather than evolutionary when it comes to security. It’s quite
impressive. I have learned a lot in just the last week or two in looking into
this. Harish, you mentioned earlier that before the general availability being
announced in May for Bitdefender HVI on XenServer that you have had this in
beta. Do you have any results from that? Can you offer any metrics of what’s
happened in the real world when people deploy this? Are the results as
revolutionary as it sounds?
Real-world rollout
Agastya: The product was first in beta and then released
in controlled availability mode, so the product is actually in production
deployment at several companies in both North America and Europe. We have a few
financial services companies, and we have some hospitals. We have put the
product to use in production deployments for virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI)
deployments where the customers are running XenApp and XenDesktop on top of
XenServer with Bitdefender HVI.
We have server workloads running straight on XenServer, too.
These are typically application workloads that the financial services companies
or the hospitals need to run. We have had some great feedback from them. Some
of them have become references as well, and we will be talking more about it at
Citrix Synergy 2017, so stay tuned. We are very excited about the fact that the
product is able to provide value in the real world.
Roemer: We have a
very detailed white paper on how to set up the secured browsing solution, the
joint solution between Citrix and Bitdefender. Even if you are running other hypervisors
in your environment, I would recommend that you set up this solution and try
redirecting some arbitrary hyperlinks over to it, to see what value you are
going to get in your organization. It’s really straightforward to set up and provides
a considerable amount of additional security visibility.
See the IDC White Paper, Hypervisor Introspection: A Transformative Approach to Advanced Attack Detection.
Bitdefender also has some really amazing videos that show
exactly how the solution can block some of the more popular exploits from this
year. They are really impressive to watch.
Gardner: Kurt, we are
about out of time, but I was curious, what’s the low-lying fruit? Harish
mentioned government, VDI, healthcare. Is it the usual suspects with compliance
issues hanging over their heads that are the low-lying fruit, or are there
other organizations that would be ripe to enjoy the benefits?
Roemer: I would say
compliance environments and anybody with regulatory requirements would very
much be low-lying fruit for this, but anybody who has sensitive applications or
very sensitive use-cases, too. Oftentimes, we hear things like outsourcing as
being one of the more sensitive use-cases because you have external third parties
who are getting in and either developing code for you, administering part of
the operating environment, or something else.
We
have also seen a pretty big uptick in terms of people being interested in this
for administering the cloud. As you move up to cloud environments and you are
defining new operating environments in the cloud while putting new applications
up in the cloud, you need to make sure that your administrative model is
protected.
Oftentimes,
you use a browser directly to provide all of the security interfaces for the
cloud, and by publishing that browser and putting this solution in front of it,
you can make sure that malware is not interrupting your ability to securely administer
the cloud environment.
Gardner: Last question
to you, Harish. What should organizations do to get ready for this? I hope we
have enticed them to learn more about it. For those organizations that actually
might want to deploy, what do they need to think about in order to be in the
best position to do that?
A new way of life
Agastya: Organizations need to think aboutsecure virtualization as a way of life within organizational behavior. As a
result, I think we will start to see more people with titles like Security DevOps (SecDevOps).
As
far as specifically using HVI, organizations should be worried about how advanced
attacks could enter their data center and potentially result in a very, very
dangerous breach and the loss of confidential intellectual property.
If
you are worried about that, you are worried about ransomware because an end-user
sitting in front of a client browser is potentially putting out your address.
You will want to think about a technology like HVI. The first step for that is to
talk to us and there is a lot of information on the Bitdefender website as well
as on Citrix’s website.
Gardner: I’m afraid we
will have to leave it there. You’ve been listening to a sponsored BriefingsDirect
discussion that examines the relationship between security and virtualization.
We have learned how adaptive companies are finding new ways to leverage their
virtualization environments to become more resilient and proactive in how they
can thwart threats by putting in distinct browsers for specific uses and reduce
their threat exposure.
So
please join me now in thanking our guests, Kurt Roemer, Chief Security
Strategist at Citrix. Thank you, Kurt.
Roemer: Thank you,
Dana. Thanks, Harish.
Agastya: Thank you,
Kurt. Thank you, Dana.
Gardner: And we have
been here with Harish Agastya, Vice President for Enterprise Solutions at
Bitdefender. Thank you, Harish.
I'm
Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions, your host and
moderator for this ongoing series of BriefingsDirect Discussions. I want to
also thank our sponsor, Bitdefender, for supporting these presentations. And of
course, a big thank you as well to our audience. And please come back next
time.
Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Get the mobile app. Download the transcript. Sponsor: Bitdefender.
Transcript of a
discussion on how adaptive companies are leveraging their virtualization environments
to become more secure and reduce
cyber risks. Copyright
Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2017. All rights reserved.
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