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Engineers fix the shortcomings of the traditional firewall

IT Best Practices Alert By Linda Musthaler , Network World , 10/09/2009
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Linda Musthaler's CIO-level look at the latest networking technologies and their benefits and pitfalls.

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Sometimes, the problems we experience with computers are a result of a legacy design. Hardware or software might have been architected 10 or 20 years ago when the world of computing was vastly different from the way it is today. As a result, the product in use today isn't as effective as it could be because of aging or obsolete design.

Such is the case of the traditional firewall, whose design dates back two decades to the late 1980s. Early firewalls consisted of packet filtering software that inspected all traffic coming into and going out of a network. If a packet of data met specific rules, its transmission was simply dropped. Later generations of firewalls were engineered to approve specific applications or to look for Internet traffic using specific ports. These legacy firewalls were built on the assumption that an application would respect its protocol which would respect the port. For example, Port 80 must mean HTTP and that must mean Web browsing. Or, Port 25 must mean SMTP and that must mean e-mail.

Podcast: Better security for your applications

That's not so true today. Many modern applications are built to be flexible, meaning they change ports as needed to deliver their content. Skype and BitTorrent, for example, hop around and use multiple ports like Port 80 or 443. A traditional firewall isn't expecting this kind of traffic there. Unfortunately, the old assumptions about port mapping applications are out the window today.

This has created a cottage industry for other "bolt-on" security applications like intrusion detection/prevention systems and antivirus/antimalware scanning. These applications are meant to catch the problems that legacy firewalls sometimes miss. The result can be a patchwork of security applications that scan traffic multiple times and add to the complexity of your infrastructure.

Seeing an opportunity to "fix the firewall," a group of security engineers started a company in 2005 to redesign the firewall architecture from the ground up. These engineers took their expertise from working at places such as Check Point Software Technologies, Juniper Networks and NetScreen Technologies and started Palo Alto Networks.  

They set out to design a single firewall appliance to address three business problems:

1. Identify and control applications, including enabling applications that can be productive to the business.

2. Prevent threats from harming the network.

3. Simplify the security infrastructure.

The Palo Alto firewall uses a unique single-pass process for traffic classification, user/group mapping and content scanning. Three technologies embedded into one appliance eliminate the need for bolt-on products:

* App-ID is traffic classification technology that determines the exact identity of nearly 900 applications flowing across the network, irrespective of port, protocol, SSL encryption or evasive tactics.

* User-ID links IP addresses to specific user identities, enabling visibility and control of network activity on a per-user basis. It integrates with your Active Directory to harvest relevant user information such as role and group assignments.

Linda Musthaler is a principal analyst with Essential Solutions Corporation.

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Palo Alto is greatBy Anonymous on October 12, 2009, 12:05 pmWe are nearing the end of a 1 month test of the PA-500 in a multi-location SMB environment. While there have been a few small rough areas, we are pleased and so...

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Nothing New/Different HereBy Anonymous on October 13, 2009, 1:39 pmWhile their Marketing may be superior, there is nothing unique about Palo Alto's application inspection capability. As just one example, the SonicWALL NSA UTM firewall...

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Nothing newBy Anon on October 14, 2009, 5:23 pmCheck Point does all of this already. It can integrate with Active Directory. I'd be interested in learning if the logs are encrypted as they are in Check Point....

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IPv6?By Anonymous on November 9, 2009, 12:27 pmWhat about IPv6; IPv6 in IPv4 and IPv6 in IPv6 encapsulation? These are major areas still unaddressed in many many "network security appliances and applications"......

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