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Prof. Giovambattista Ianni - 2013.  10 ECTS (5 Theory + 5 Lab.)  Suggested material:  W. Stallings, Cryptography and Network Security  W. Stallings,

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Presentation on theme: "Prof. Giovambattista Ianni - 2013.  10 ECTS (5 Theory + 5 Lab.)  Suggested material:  W. Stallings, Cryptography and Network Security  W. Stallings,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Prof. Giovambattista Ianni - 2013

2  10 ECTS (5 Theory + 5 Lab.)  Suggested material:  W. Stallings, Cryptography and Network Security  W. Stallings, Computer Security: Principles and Practice  Online material  Required skills:  Operating Systems, Computer Networks, Databases, Web Information Systems

3 1. Talk on a selected topic 2. The talk must include a live demo 3. Oral exam

4  Part 1: Cryptography on the field  Hashing, Asymmetric and Symmetric Cryptography, PKI  Part 2: a travel into the security of the TCP/IP stack  Part 3: Host security. Programming security.  Laboratory: Linux, simulations with Netkit  Ongoing projects

5 Pancake  Cake made in the Pan Poorly known in Italy as «Frittelle»

6 Who/what sits in the playfield:  Computers  Networks  Humans (stupid and not stupid ones) The players:  Attackers: black and white hackers  Defenders: sysadmins, programmers, users

7  consider 3 aspects of information security:  security attack  security mechanism  security service  note terms  threat – a potential for violation of security  attack – an assault on system security, a deliberate attempt to evade security services

8 The possible moves (Attack types):  Attacks to integrity  Data counterfeiting, identity theft  Attacks to confidentiality  Weak and strong information theft  Attacks to the quality of service  Denial of service  Authenticity, accountability

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10 The art of war teaches us to rely not on the likelihood of the enemy's not coming, but on our own readiness to receive him; not on the chance of his not attacking, but rather on the fact that we have made our position unassailable. —The Art of War, Sun Tzu

11  Estimated Money loss per year due to security breaches in your company = L  Estimated Money loss per year due to uncontrolled system administrator/programmers paranoidism = D L > D

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14  enhance security of data processing systems and information transfers of an organization  intended to counter security attacks  using one or more security mechanisms  often replicates functions normally associated with physical documents  which, for example, have signatures, dates; need protection from disclosure, tampering, or destruction; be notarized or witnessed; be recorded or licensed

15  Authentication - assurance that communicating entity is the one claimed  have both peer-entity & data origin authentication  Access Control - prevention of the unauthorized use of a resource  Data Confidentiality –protection of data from unauthorized disclosure  Data Integrity - assurance that data received is as sent by an authorized entity  Non-Repudiation - protection against denial by one of the parties in a communication  Availability – resource accessible/usable

16  feature designed to detect, prevent, or recover from a security attack  no single mechanism that will support all services required  however one particular element underlies many of the security mechanisms in use:  cryptographic techniques  hence our focus on this topic

17  specific security mechanisms:  encipherment, digital signatures, access controls, data integrity, authentication exchange, traffic padding, routing control, notarization  pervasive security mechanisms:  trusted functionality, security labels, event detection, security audit trails, security recovery

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20 Better known as the «Ciambelle di Homer» From «dough» & «nut»  «donut» Can they be salty? No these are the bagels

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23 Fifth Edition by William Stallings Lecture slides by Lawrie Brown

24  Cryptographic algorithms symmetric ciphers asymmetric encryption hash functions  Mutual Trust  Network Security  Computer Security

25  National Institute of Standards & Technology (NIST)  Internet Society (ISOC)  International Telecommunication Union Telecommunication Standardization Sector (ITU-T)  International Organization for Standardization (ISO)

26  The combination of space, time, and strength that must be considered as the basic elements of this theory of defense makes this a fairly complicated matter. Consequently, it is not easy to find a fixed point of departure.. — On War, Carl Von Clausewitz

27  the protection afforded to an automated information system in order to attain the applicable objectives of preserving the integrity, availability and confidentiality of information system resources (includes hardware, software, firmware, information/data, and telecommunications)

28  can define 3 levels of impact from a security breach Low Moderate High

29  confidentiality – student grades  integrity – patient information  availability – authentication service

30 1. not simple 2. must consider potential attacks 3. procedures used counter-intuitive 4. involve algorithms and secret info 5. must decide where to deploy mechanisms 6. battle of wits between attacker / admin 7. not perceived on benefit until fails 8. requires regular monitoring 9. too often an after-thought 10. regarded as impediment to using system

31  ITU-T X.800 “Security Architecture for OSI”  defines a systematic way of defining and providing security requirements  for us it provides a useful, if abstract, overview of concepts we will study

32  X.800: “a service provided by a protocol layer of communicating open systems, which ensures adequate security of the systems or of data transfers”  RFC 2828: “a processing or communication service provided by a system to give a specific kind of protection to system resources”

33  using this model requires us to: 1. design a suitable algorithm for the security transformation 2. generate the secret information (keys) used by the algorithm 3. develop methods to distribute and share the secret information 4. specify a protocol enabling the principals to use the transformation and secret information for a security service

34  using this model requires us to: 1. select appropriate gatekeeper functions to identify users 2. implement security controls to ensure only authorised users access designated information or resources

35  topic roadmap & standards organizations  security concepts:  confidentiality, integrity, availability  X.800 security architecture  security attacks, services, mechanisms  models for network (access) security


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