I know I don't have all the expertise that a lot of the people on this list probably have - so PLEASE take it easy on me for responding to this.
I too have had a 'network engineering' team make this suggestion, and get it passed (over my objections). Even though I brought up a lot of the reasons already mentioned (security, DDOS zombies, Kazaa, limewire, ....), executives allowed them to open the ports out -- because they are the 'network security experts' in our company. I never agreed with it, but one of their reasons to open this was passive FTP. Their reason was a lot of the sites that were visited used Passive FTP, that randomly uses any port above port 1024. Can anyone comment on this? This never sat well with me, and I really didn't like it when vendors who brought laptops into our environment - discovered this, after only 1 week on site :-( As a server engineer, I've had to deal with the NIMDA and other worms/virii/.... as you can guess, that was a little worrisome. Chris -----Original Message----- From: Chris Berry [mailto:compjma@;hotmail.com] Sent: Monday, November 11, 2002 4:03 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Open All Outbound Ports? >From: tony tony <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Our firewall group has came to me several times over the last few >months >wanting my approval to open all of the �OUTBOUND� ports on our >firewall >facing the internet. Not a good idea. One of the most important things during a security breach is to keep the attacker from using your platform as a staging ground. By preventing them from commincating freely, you greatly retard their capabilities. For example, a trojan will probably try to "phone home" and if you have blocking set up this will show in your logs. By opening all your outbound ports you're just asking to be a DDOS zombie, warez ftp server, etc. >Their argument is that this would not >significantly reduce our >security Not true, just like a military base its important to know what is going out as well as what is coming in. >and it will reduce their time/effort in administration. Possibly true, although the amount of time it takes to open a set of ports can't be very long. >They claim they get several requests a week to open up out bound ports >and >the number keeps growing each month. How can this be true, this would make me highly suspicious, I would want a record of all the ports they've opened over the last three months and what programs/services they opened them for. I mean unless you guys are going through some kind of major upgrade cycle their should be little or no change in your port list on a monthly basis. >They want to go for the gusto�and >open up all 65,000+ outbound ports. >I am in the security area and they want my agreement/sign off before >they >do this. It just does not �feel/smell right� but I am losing >ground with >my arguments. What are some good arguments I can use? Not only would I not sign off on this, I'd launch an investigation into their procedures, something definitely doesn't feel right here. I would suspect that they are allowing traffic that they shouldn't be just because someone asked for it. Kazaa for example. Chris Berry [EMAIL PROTECTED] Systems Administrator JM Associates "And here in our server room you can see our Beowolf Cluster of C64's that keeps our enterprise on the very cutting edge of technology." _________________________________________________________________ The new MSN 8: smart spam protection and 2 months FREE* http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail
