Industry Insight: Holistic Security is Key to Meet the Digital Security Threats of Today & Tomorrow

On October 4th, 2018, Bloomberg’s Businessweek released a report alleging that Chinese spies implanted a “malicious chip” into server motherboards assembled by Super Micro Computer Inc. (Supermicro), a U.S.-based Original Device Manufacturer (ODM) that manufactures servers used in hyperscale data centers.  Growing national security threats are increasingly putting enterprises at risk as the bare-metal of our digital infrastructure depends on a supply chain highly influenced and exposed to the Chinese government.  

If Bloomberg’s allegations prove true, digital business leaders have yet another proof point that security matters and is vital to the ongoing integrity of their business in an increasingly digital economy.  Considering that Supermicro is one of the largest manufacturers of servers by annual shipments and the largest ODM according to research firm, IDC, the scope of the “spy chip” vulnerability could be broad.  But what do enterprises do now?  The digital equipment supply chain will not change overnight.

Hardware-Level Security Vulnerabilities are Growing and Threatening the  Foundation of Our Digital Economy

According to the Bloomberg report “The Big Hack: How China Used a Tiny Chip to Infiltrate U.S. Companies”, the malicious hardware implant (a.k.a. malicious chip) was detected by Amazon’s AWS engineers during their acquisition of the video compression firm Elemental Technologies, which leveraged Super Micro Computer’s servers for their on-premise platform offerings.

This malicious chip implant allegedly interrupts instructions to an affected server’s Baseboard Management Controller (BMC) whereby a rogue administrator could gain remote access to the server through a firmware update malware and potentially impact virtual and other physical servers sitting on a data center’s network.

What is concerning, if true, is these hardware vulnerabilities, including proven vulnerabilities like Meltdown, Spectre and Foreshadow could be leveraged to attack data centers by breaking traditional security boundaries and safeguards.

For instance, a hacker could use these hardware-level vulnerabilities to create a malware or hack method to log into a cloud service and potentially scan memory and processor cache to gain visibility to other users’ personal data, company intellectual property and/or acquire access to applications and virtual machines hosted on the same affected physical server.  This type of threat exposes a business to a profound risk of personal and confidential data and content being compromised and stolen.

AI-based Behavioral Analytics – The Centerpiece of the Holistic Security Platform

If the Chinese “malicious chip” threat is considered in isolation it would seem – as represented in the Bloomberg report – there is no viable solution to the problem.  As Bloomberg reporter, Jordan Robertson, stated in an interview with Emily Chang, “The Chinese government installed malicious microchips on Supermicro-assembled server motherboards.  What a malicious microchip is, think about it as an infection that is hardcoded into your computer.  You cannot get rid of it without throwing the machine away.”   

However, the Bloomberg report intentionally or unintentionally hints and/or alleges that Amazon and Apple identified affected servers and monitored them for malicious activities (hack/breach incidents) prior to removing them from their data centers, suggesting the use of holistic security methods to identify and contain a threat that exploits the “malicious chip” vulnerability.   Spot on!

Going forward businesses need to take a new, holistic approach to security.  Traditional mindsets and approaches to enterprise security will be insufficient as rabid interest and investment in IoT and 5G by enterprises around the world expand the cyber-risk landscape.  However, based on our own research at neXt Curve, we have observed significant gaps in security capabilities and frameworks needed to address future bare-metal-to-edge security threats in a rapidly converging and expanding ICT universe.

One of the key technologies needed to fill the many holistic security capability gaps is AI-based behavioral analytics.  It is an emerging technology that is a critical element of a holistic security strategy and platform whereby standard (what is normal) profiles and behaviors of users and entities/resources (hosts, applications, and data repositories) and activities (network traffic and compute processes) are defined, and anomalous activity is analyzed, flagged, and quarantined or processes killed if needed.

While behavioral analytics may reside at the core of a holistic security solution framework, additional capabilities and services will need to be integrated in order to realize visibility and control over an enterprise’s internal and external digital infrastructure and environments.  Additional solution components will range from cloud access security brokering, integrated endpoint and network service management, security information and event management (SIEM), to intelligent firewalls with DPI (deep packet inspection) for DLP: data loss prevention and content filtering.

Securing the network and software is not good enough anymore.  Enterprises need to think of security from bare metal in the data center to the cloud to the endpoint devices that deliver the digital value we all love so much.  It’s time to think differently about digital security.

Implications for Business Leaders

CISOs, CTOs and CIOs need to think of security holistically and consider new approaches to address an expanding field of profound hardware-level threats like Meltdown, Spectre and the tampering of hardware exemplified by the alleged Chinese “malicious chip” server sabotage.  The management of risk will require ensuring that both internal and external resources and infrastructures are vetted whether they are enterprise-managed or managed by a 3rd party service provider.

The C-Suite and the board need to understand the significant risks that processor-level vulnerabilities will have on their business and on their digital strategy.  It will be critical to bring cybersecurity competencies and a robust agenda into the boardroom to effectively manage and govern the expanding and deepening sea of digital threats facing enterprises today and into the foreseeable future.

Technology vendors have an opportunity to connect the dots and bridge existing and emerging technologies into a holistic security platform.  This will require traditional vendors and service providers to venture outside of their silos and partner with holistic security ecosystem plays or lead by example with newer innovations.


If you are interested in getting additional insight on the topic of holistic security and strategies for your enterprise, contact us for an inquiry session with our neXt Curve analysts and consultants.

Related Content & Media

by

Akshay Sharma

Research & Advisory Fellow, neXt Curve

and
Leonard Lee
Managing Director, neXCurve

October 5, 2018

© 2018 neXt Curve. All rights reserved.

5 comments

  1. Excellent discussion points sure to fill board rooms for the foreseeable future. I believe DARPA has also foreseen this threat and has been working on a government solution with an eye towards defending the private sector, but those completed projects and products may still be years out. Watch this space, carefully.

    1. Excellent Comments…in fact you are so true regarding DARPA who not only invented the Internet but have also developed many of the algorithms for holistic behavioral analysis discussed here, leveraging AI and more, now being launched as a managed service by firms like Cybraics…

Leave a Reply to csggene3 Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *