Better security not about tech: Mitnick

Companies eager to tighten up their information security perimeters should focus not on technology but on teaching their employees how to say 'no', ex-hacker done good Kevin Mitnick told a full house at Toshiba's MobileXchange conference in Melbourne yesterday.

Mitnick became a cyberspace legend after his success in penetrating networks at major telecommunications firms -- including Pacific Bell and Motorola, Nokia, Fujitsu, Novell and NEC -- led the FBI on a 15-year manhunt that ended when his 1995 capture put him behind bars for nearly four years. Older and seemingly wiser, he now uses his skills for good as a Los Angeles-based security consultant, stopping in Australia briefly to address the crowd at the annual Toshiba event.

Many companies invest heavily in security technologies to protect their networks, but Mitnick was quick to point out that even the tightest technological barriers never stopped him; rather, some carefully planned social engineering – or even a bit of Dumpster diving in one’s spare time -- can often be far more effective at penetrating the weakest security link at most companies: their people.

"What you can find in the trash is simply amazing," said Mitnick, holding up a "souvenir" from his earlier days: a printed directory listing the name, phone number, email address, direct reports and other information about every employee in the company. "People throw out notes, drafts of letters, printouts of source code, printouts of project documentation they’re working on. In some cases they even write down passwords and access information, or calendars that list every person that person has talked to or met with".

This information provides invaluable assistance to hackers keen to worm their way into a company by, say, impersonating an employee and calling the internal help desk, or dropping into the site and pretending to be a business associate. Because people hate to say no even when they’re suspicious of a well-presented stranger, Mitnick says, smooth talking has gotten many a hacker far closer to a target company’s network than days of brute-force technological attacks.

Modern technology is an enabler for such attacks: if a hacker can worm his way into a conference room for just a few minutes, for example, an wireless access point can be plugged into an out-of-the way network access point, providing an open back door into the network even when the hacker is parked outside the building.

The solution to such security vulnerabilities is easy to understand, but often hard to implement: develop clear security policies for issues such as treatment of strangers, handling of information and access to physical facilities by visitors. In suspicious circumstances, teach employees to fall back on those policies rather than trying to ad-lib their response or give in to their natural reticence to accommodate the hacker's requests.

Even a simple request for contact details, so that a company employee might call back the person requesting assistance, can be enough to make many hackers turn tail and run.

"We can't expect our employees to be human lie detectors," Mitnick said. "One of the most difficult challenges in corporate cultures is getting people to modify their politeness norms. Social psychology has found that people should generally pay attention to their own discomfort; if something doesn’t feel right, or it's nagging at their gut, they’d better check it out. They’re not always going to remember a security policy, but what you want is to come up with some very simple protocols that will trigger employees to refer to security policy. The only people who are going to object to this are the bad guys".

Kevin Mitnick, one of the world's leading security experts, is delivering a two-day Certified Social Engineering Prevention Workshop on April 12 and 13 in Sydney, presented by ZDNet Australia. You can register your interest in attending this event here.

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Talkback 7 comments

  1. Kevin Mitnick is a genious. I think that he has authority over many many young people who like computers and want to be like him Anonymous -- 05/03/05

    Kevin Mitnick is a genious. I think that he has authority over many many young people who like computers and want to be like him

  2. Kevin Mitnick is a criminal who has repeatedly demonstrated his willingness to break the law, cost companies money, and ruin people's lives. The best thing to do when it comes to Kevin Mitnick is to walk away and let him stew in his own sociopathic juice Anonymous -- 05/03/05

    Kevin Mitnick is a criminal who has repeatedly demonstrated his willingness to break the law, cost companies money, and ruin people's lives. The best thing to do when it comes to Kevin Mitnick is to walk away and let him stew in his own sociopathic juices.

  3. So what he's saying is that security should be covering all aspects in a business environment, where even the employees should follow some procedure in regards to throwing p****words and other security sensitive materials. Gee, it doesn't take a Anonymous -- 06/03/05

    So what he's saying is that security should be covering all aspects in a business environment, where even the employees should follow some procedure in regards to throwing p****words and other security sensitive materials.

    Gee, it doesn't take a genius to figure that out.

  4. Kevin Mitnick is king!!! Anonymous -- 08/03/05

    Kevin Mitnick is king!!!

  5. I saw him on TECH TV.He was so interesting...what a brilliant person. Anonymous -- 13/03/05

    I saw him on TECH TV.He was so interesting...what a brilliant person.

  6. I hope Mr. Mitnick takes the time to think about paying back the employees that he hurt 1994 by duping them into believing they were helping fellow employees. Bosses are not very forgiving when their employess are duped into releasing trade secret softwa Anonymous -- 14/03/05

    I hope Mr. Mitnick takes the time to think about paying back the employees that he hurt 1994 by duping them into believing they were helping fellow employees. Bosses are not very forgiving when their employess are duped into releasing trade secret software. Kevin laughs about it, but most of them don't. Stealing the source code from Motorola, Fujitsu, Nokia and Novell is not a trivial crime. As far as being held without bail, he received bail hearings and filed several motions, but the judge wasn't going to be duped by his misrepresentations. His running away from an arrest warrant qualified him as someone who cared little for complying with the laws.

  7. Mitnick was a con artist who lied cheated and stole his way to fame and now fortune. He is not particularly skilled technically and never has been. He lies, cheats and bullies his way into systems and cares nothing about the path of damage he does along t Anonymous -- 26/07/05

    Mitnick was a con artist who lied cheated and stole his way to fame and now fortune. He is not particularly skilled technically and never has been. He lies, cheats and bullies his way into systems and cares nothing about the path of damage he does along the way.

    He is not a one time victum of the system. He is a repeat offender who has shown his disregard for authority time and again.

    There where plenty of people who managed to "hack" systems legally, With permission for example. There is a difference from stealing Credit Card Numbers (Mitnick) and reviewing a system.

    Some of us even make an honest living without having ever had to resort to stealing!

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