While NSS is a good organization, I have to wonder about a test that would rate 
TippingPoint so poorly and SourceFire and ISS so positively. My experience has 
been that while all are capable products, SourceFire and ISS take a LOT of 
effort to make them effective while TP, comparatively, takes much less effort. 
The article even mentions that fact, that Sourcefire took a lot of tuning. And 
having worked with all of these IPS, I have found that TP, SourceFire, ISS and 
McAfee are all pretty much the same in terms of effectiveness.  

This is also odd, since a few years ago, NSS was giving TP glowing reviews. 
From 2004, NSS wrote:

"Overall the performance of UnityOne is very impressive, combining near-perfect 
security effectiveness with latency close to that of a layer 2 switch...we also 
found UnityOne to be very stable, surviving our extended reliability tests 
without missing a beat, and without blocking any legitimate traffic or 
succumbing to common evasion techniques."  

That is from their report in January 2004. Okay, that was 5 years ago, times 
change.

One thing that always concerns me about these tests is the fact that they are 
laboratory-style tests and not real-world tests. Merely stopping an attack only 
one measure of effectiveness for an IPS. These devices must be made operational 
in a IT department. And they must integrate with other procedures, practices 
and devices. This is something a lab test cannot uncover. 

Andrew Plato, CISSP, CISM, QSA
President/Principal Consultant
Anitian Enterprise Security 


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, December 09, 2009 6:21 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Re: I love the smell of whining in the morning...

This is what TP is referring to:

http://www.networkworld.com/news/2009/120709-ips-tests.html?hpg1=bn

I have seen the full report and it is fair to say that TP did very poor 
compared to the competition.  This is really no surprise for those of us close 
to the industry who understand TP's heritage and approach.  exploit driven 
coverage with limited evasion capabilities wrapped around a pretty UI is a 
recipe for security by obscurity.  Well, at least they beat out Juniper :)

Oh and NSS is probably the best and most neutral IPS testing body out there by 
far.  This particular report is 100% independent and extremely comprehensive 
(the best I've seen to date) and includes coverage, performance, Evasion, and 
various TCO rankings.  I *highly* recommend you obtain the report if you are 
interested and have the money to do so...

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A guide to understanding SSL certificates, how they operate and their 
application. By making use of an SSL certificate on your web server, you can 
securely collect sensitive information online, and increase business by giving 
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