> The odds dont matter if the risk will result in catastrophic loss to
the business.  

 

Sure they do.

 

A meteor that wipes out your facility in North America can be mitigated
by having a completely redundant $50bil factory in Europe.

 

Are you recommending that?

 

-sc

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Micheal Espinola Jr
Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2013 7:55 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] man-in-the-middle attack

 

IMO, its a matter of recreational gambling vs. professional (done for a
living) gambling[1].  You know the odds, or you don't - doesn't matter.
What matters is if you can continue to profit from the risk.  Will the
risk hurt the continuity of business operations in terms of revenue
loss.  The extreme example of this is Russian roulette.

 

The resulting exposed data in a MitM scenario is unique and has
substantial potential.  What is important to monetize here is the loss
resulting from a MitM attack at all levels of remote access for the
organization.  

 

The odds dont matter if the risk will result in catastrophic loss to the
business.  As someone that has discovered corporate espionage
intrusions, and systematically prevented the loss of future business
deals worth millions of dollars (whose loss would have otherwise
collapsed the business) - I have a specific view of this issue.  The
only additional info on this that I will provide is that the intrusion
allowed a bidding competitor access to corporate communications as well
as business plans and bidding documents.  My discoveries led to the
prevention of a competitor from staying one step ahead of us in business
planning and bidding, and eventual Federal prosecution of the intruder.

 

 

1. I'm not a gambler, but I have known professional gamblers. 




--
Espi

 

 

On Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 4:05 PM, Ken Schaefer <[email protected]> wrote:

> In any event, the odds are irrelevant - the issue is the business risk
of intrusion/loss. 

 

How can you say that "odds are irrelevant" if the issue is business
risk? 

 

Risk is "potential for loss", and potential includes a weighting for
likelihood (i.e. "the odds")?

 

Can you clarify what you mean?

 

Cheers

Ken 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Micheal Espinola Jr
Sent: Thursday, 1 August 2013 1:43 AM


To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] man-in-the-middle attack

 

Odds would be very difficult to extrapolate with any legitimate
accuracy, as you need to know and control the possible environments and
habits of your remote employees.  In any event, the odds are irrelevant
- the issue is the business risk of intrusion/loss. 




--
Espi

 

 

On Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 8:07 AM, David Lum <[email protected]> wrote:

        I need to present management with the odds of this actually
getting exploited, as I'd want to force TLS 1.2 for ADFS but that takes
Chrome and more importantly Safari (iOS devices) out of the mix, so I
suspect management might say "we want compatibility instead of
protection from some obscure attack that is unlikely to happen.

         

        In short, what are the odds of a MITM attack actually happening
between my remote employee and our ADFS server?

        David Lum 
        Sr. Systems Engineer // NWEATM
        Office 503.548.5229 // Cell (voice/text) 503.267.9764

         

 

 


Reply via email to