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DOD tests vulnerability management tools

By Jason Miller
Published on September 19, 2007

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Related story links

NIST SCAP Web site

Security initiatives start to converge

GAO recommends changes to FISMA reporting

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The Defense Department is testing a process to automate system vulnerability collection data from across the services and military agencies.

The Security Content Automation Protocol (SCAP) eventually will use Web services and a service-oriented architecture to scan as many as 1 million information technology assets to manage vulnerabilities and deal with possible threats.

SCAP will help DOD, and eventually other agencies, examine how security content automation will help achieve compliance with the Federal Information Security Management Act and other cybersecurity directives and improve overall IT security.

"The pilot using the SCAP protocols will give us more advanced capabilities and optimize current business practices," said Ryan Larson, of the National Security Agency's systems information assurance systems engineering office. "We want to develop plans to implement Web services to expose network defense data enterprisewide."

The Army tested about 30,000 assets, which gave the service a better understanding of what was vulnerable and what was safe, DOD officials said today at the National Institute of Standards and Technology Security Automation Conference.

DOD and other agencies face a number of issues in automating vulnerability data. For example, the Army found that officials defined systems, hardware and software differently. Officials also said they found that sometimes people didn't report important incidents or potential problems because they didn't think they were important.

Through this SCAP effort, officials say this will change.

Joe Wolfkiel, chief of DOD's computer network defense research technology office, said his group is developing a data exchange model to help deal with taxonomy issues.

"We had to set up the constructs of what information the network defender cares about and then build the SCAP standards around that," he said.

The data exchange model eventually will use Web services to obtain data from five areas of the network:
  • Assets -- what is connected to the network.
  • Vulnerabilities -- which platforms, hardware and software have potential problems and the severity of those problems.
  • Events -- where vulnerabilities happen on the network in basic terms.
  • Incident -- what happened, who caused it and what assets was it directed against.
  • Threats -- how they negatively affected the network.


Wolfkiel said that when the testing is done, DOD will turn over the data exchange model and lessons to NIST to figure out if the agency should take this governmentwide.

"NIST can decide to define the schemas and publish them as Web services so we can all use the same thing," he said.

Margaret Myers, DOD's deputy chief information officer, said the SCAP work will have the biggest effect on a common vocabulary.

"Once you do that, then you can tag and expose the data and use Web services to give access across the department," she said. "Then people will understand what the data means and how they can improve their cyber defenses."



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