1.3. Security Attacks
A useful means of
classifying security attacks, used both in X.800 and RFC 2828, is in terms of
passive attacks and active attacks. A passive attack attempts to learn or
make use of information from the system but does not affect system resources. An
active attack attempts to alter system resources or affect their
operation.
Passive Attacks
Passive attacks are in the nature of eavesdropping on, or
monitoring of, transmissions. The goal of the opponent is to obtain information
that is being transmitted. Two types of passive attacks are release of message
contents and traffic analysis.
The release of message
contents is easily understood . A telephone conversation, an electronic mail message, and a
transferred file may contain sensitive or confidential information. We would
like to prevent an opponent from learning the contents of these
transmissions.
A second type of passive attack, traffic analysis, is subtler Suppose that we had a way of masking the
contents of messages or other information traffic so that opponents, even if
they captured the message, could not extract the information from the message.
The common technique for masking contents is encryption. If we had encryption
protection in place, an opponent might still be able to observe the pattern of
these messages. The opponent could determine the location and identity of
communicating hosts and could observe the frequency and length of messages being
exchanged. This information might be useful in guessing the nature of the
communication that was taking place.
Passive attacks are very difficult to detect because they do
not involve any alteration of the data. Typically, the message traffic is sent
and received in an apparently normal fashion and neither the sender nor receiver
is aware that a third party has read the messages or observed the traffic
pattern. However, it is feasible to prevent the success of these attacks,
usually by means of encryption. Thus, the emphasis in dealing with passive
attacks is on prevention rather than detection.
Active Attacks
Active attacks involve some modification of the data stream or
the creation of a false stream and can be subdivided into four categories:
masquerade, replay, modification of messages, and denial of service.
A masquerade takes place when one
entity pretends to be a different entity. A masquerade attack usually includes one of
the other forms of active attack. For example, authentication sequences can be
captured and replayed after a valid authentication sequence has taken place,
thus enabling an authorized entity with few privileges to obtain extra
privileges by impersonating an entity that has those privileges.
Modification of messages simply means that some
portion of a legitimate message is altered, or that messages are delayed or
reordered, to produce an unauthorized effect. For example, a message meaning "Allow John
Smith to read confidential file accounts" is
modified to mean "Allow Fred Brown to read confidential file accounts."
The denial of service prevents or
inhibits the normal use or management of communications facilities . This attack may have a
specific target; for example, an entity may suppress all messages directed to a
particular destination (e.g., the security audit service). Another form of
service denial is the disruption of an entire network, either by disabling the
network or by overloading it with messages so as to degrade
performance.
Active attacks present the opposite characteristics of passive
attacks. Whereas passive attacks are difficult to detect, measures are available
to prevent their success. On the other hand, it is quite difficult to prevent
active attacks absolutely, because of the wide variety of potential physical,
software, and network vulnerabilities. Instead, the goal is to detect active
attacks and to recover from any disruption or delays caused by them. If the
detection has a deterrent effect, it may also contribute to
prevention.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment