Study: Businesses don't understand Web application security threats
Forrester says confusion may blur the distinction between Web and traditional firewall security.
By
Tim Greene
,
NetworkWorld.com
, 03/20/2007
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Businesses may unwittingly leave themselves open to application-layer attacks because they don’t understand their networks
lack defenses to deflect them, according to a study by Forrester Research.
“[M]ost enterprises are not even aware that their traditional network firewalls cannot protect against these attacks,” according
to the study Web Application Firewall Forecast: 2007 to 2010. The report says demand for Web application firewalls (WAFs) will increase over the next three years, then drop.
This lack of awareness may prove harmful to businesses because Web applications are rife with weaknesses, according to a report
by Symantec on Internet security threats over the last six months of 2006. “Sixty-six percent of vulnerabilities disclosed
during this period affected Web applications,” according to the white paper Symantec Internet Security Threat Report Trends for July-December 06.
In addition, the same study says 77% of easily exploitable vulnerabilities affected Web applications.
The Forrester study differentiates between traditional firewalls that examine packets and WAFs that examine flows of packets
that represent sessions with Web servers. “What many firms do not understand is how [WAFs] differ from a traditional network
firewall,” the study says.
Awareness of Web application threats may grow as businesses come into compliance with Payment Card Industry (PCI) standards for data security intended to protect credit card numbers and other personal data transferred during credit card checks and online transactions,
Forrester says. These standards actually require WAFs as one of two options for protecting against unknown attacks on Web
applications. The other option is reviewing the security of individual Web applications and fixing flaws, according to the
Forrester study.
Businesses face a deadline in mid-2008 to comply with the PCI standards, and up until that point knowledge of Web application
security and WAFs will grow, as will sales of WAFs, Forrester predicts. After that, sales of WAFs will dip because businesses
will have complied, especially retailers that depend on use of credit cards to do business.
As businesses move their defenses to higher layers of the IP hierarchy, so do those looking to pilfer private data, Forrester
says. “Attackers are also moving up the stack, with application layer and session layer attacks increasing in frequency and
destructiveness - but traditional network firewalls don’t help,” the report says.
While many customers will buy stand-alone WAFs devices to meet these threats by mid-2008, gradually the functionality of these
boxes will be absorbed by other equipment, Forrester says, such as application acceleration platforms and generalized security
appliances. The analyst firm predicts some WAFs vendors will be bought up by larger networking firms. “This consolidation
will further push prices lower as WAF gets included as part of a packaged network security or application delivery offering,”
the report says.
Forrester lists Breach Security, Citrix Systems, F5 Networks, Imperva, NetContinuum and Protegrity as the leading WAF vendors.
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