Wireless Network Security
31 Slides4.03 MB
Wireless Network Security
Why wireless? Wifi, which is short for wireless fi something, allows your computer to connect to the Internet using magic. -Motel 6 commercial 2
but it comes at a price Wireless networks present security risks far above and beyond traditional wired networks Rogue access points Ad-hoc networks Evil twins Wired/wireless bridging Eavesdropping 3 Compromised clients War driving Spectrum DoS DHCP spoofing ARP poisoning Traffic cracking IP leakage Man-in-the-middle Grizzly bears MAC spoofing Packet-based DoS
Agenda The Cisco Unified Wireless Networks Cisco Security Agent (CSA) Cisco NAC Appliance Cisco Firewall Cisco IPS CS-MARS Common wireless threats How Cisco Wireless Security protects against them 4
Today’s wireless network 5
Cisco Unified Wireless Network The following five interconnected elements work together to deliver a unified enterprise-class wireless solution: Client devices Access points Wireless controllers Network management Mobility services 6
CSA – Cisco Security Agent Full featured agent-based endpoint protection Two components: Managed client - Cisco Security Agent Single point of configuration - Cisco Management Center 7
CSA - Purpose 8
CSA – Wireless Perspective 9
CSA – Combined Wireless Features General CSA features Zero-day virus protection Control of sensitive data Provide integrity checking before allowing full network access Policy management and activity reporting CSA Mobility features Able to block access to unauthorized or ad-hoc networks Can force VPN in unsecured environments Stop unauthorized wireless-to-wired network bridging 10
CSA – End User View 11 05/30/2009
Cisco Network Admission Control (NAC) Determines the users, their machines, and their roles Grant access to network based on level of security compliance Interrogation and remediation of noncompliant devices Audits for security compliance 12
NAC - Overview 13 05/30/2009
Cisco NAC Architecture 14
Cisco NAC Features Client identification Access via Active Directory, Clean Access Agent, or even web form Compliance auditing Non-compliant or vulnerable devices through network scans or Clean Access Agent Policy enforcement Quarantine access and provide notification to users of vulnerabilities 15
Cisco Firewall (Placement Options) Source: Cisco, Deploying Firewalls Throughout Your Organization
Why Placing Firewalls in Multiple Network Segments? Provide the first line of defense in network security infrastructures Prevent access breaches at all key network junctures WLAN separation with firewall to limit access to sensitive data and protect from data loss Help organizations comply with the latest corporate and industry governance mandates Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) Gramm-Leach-Bliley (GLB) Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS)
Cisco IPS Designed to accurately identify, classify and stop malicious traffic Worms, spyware, adware, network viruses which is achieved through detailed traffic inspection Collaboration of IPS & WLC simplifies and automates threat detection & mitigation 18
CS-MARS:Cisco Security Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting System Monitor the network Detect and correlate anomalies (providing visualization) Mitigate threats 19
Cross-Network Anomaly Detection and Correlation MARS is configured to obtain the configurations of other network devices. Devices send events to MARS via SNMP. Anomalies are detected and correlated across all devices.
Monitoring, Anomalies, & Mitigation Discover Layer 3 devices on network Entire network can be mapped Find MAC addresses, end-points, topology Monitors wired and wireless devices Unified monitoring provides complete picture Anomalies can be correlated Complete view of anomalies (e.g. host names, MAC addresses, IP addresses, ports, etc.) Mitigation responses triggered using rules Rules can be further customized to extend MARS
Agenda The Cisco Unified Wireless Networks Cisco Security Agent (CSA) Cisco NAC Appliance Cisco Firewall Cisco IPS CS-MARS Common wireless threats How Cisco Wireless Security protects against them 22
Rogue Access Points Rogue Access Points refer to unauthorized access points setup in a corporate network Two varieties: Added for intentionally malicious behavior Added by an employee not following policy Either case needs to be prevented 23
Rogue Access Points - Protection Cisco Wireless Unified Network security can: Detect Rogue AP’s Determine if they are on the network Quarantine and report CS-MARS notification and reporting Locate rogue AP’s 24
Cisco Rogue AP Mapping 25
Group Quiz For each of the business challenges below, which component(s) of CUWN protect against them 1. Mitigate network misuse, hacking and malware from WLAN clients by inspecting traffic flows 2. Identify who is on the network and enforce granular policies to prevent exposure to viruses and “malware” 3. Streamline user experience, consolidate accounting, and improve password management 4. Standardize on wireless client connection policies while protecting them from suspect content and potential hackers 5. Supporting and maintaining a diverse range of security products, correlating events and delivering concise reporting 6. Offer secure, controlled access to network services for non employees and contractors 26
Guest Wireless 27
Guest Wifi Benefits Network segmentation Policy management Guest traffic monitoring Customizable access portals 28
Conclusions Present unparalleled threats The Cisco Unified Wireless Network Solution provides the best defense against these threats 29
In-Band Modes
Compromised Clients Wifi Threat Security Concern CSA Feature Ad-hoc Connections Wide-open connections Unencrypted Unauthenticated Insecure Pre-defined ad-hoc policy Concurrent wired/wifi connection Contamenating secure wired environment Concurrent wired/wifi pre-defined policy Disable wifi traffic if wired detected Access to unsecured wifi May lack authentication / encryption Risk of traffic cracking, rogue network devices Location based policies Restrict allowed SSIDs Enforce stronger security policies 31