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Saturday | 6 December, 2008
Intrusion-prevention systems still not used full-throttle
Reasons cited were reliability, throughput, traffic latency and false positives.
Ellen Messmer (Network World) 24/09/2008 08:41:00

Network-based intrusion-prevention systems are in-line devices intended to detect and block a wide variety of attacks, but the equipment still is often used more like an intrusion-detection system to passively monitor traffic, new research shows.

Infonetics Research interviewed 169 security professionals responsible for managing IPS in their organizations to find out whether the full functionality of the IPS filters for blocking attacks was actually used, and the reasons why if not. The study, commissioned by IPS vendor TippingPoint, included its product, as well as those from Cisco, IBM, McAfee and Sourcefire.

"People are still very cautious with IPS," says Jeff Wilson, principle analyst for network security at Infonetics. "My main impression is we are still not in an all-IPS world, as much as everyone would like to pretend we are."

Cisco is the dominant vendor in IPS, and the survey reflected that, with 77 Cisco IPS customers, along with 38 TippingPoint customers, 36 IBM ISS Proventia customers, 26 McAfee IPS customers and 15 Sourcefire IPS customers -- which all offered detailed descriptions of how they use IPS in their companies. The average size of each company was 9,418 employees.

The first step in IPS is typically the decision to use it in-band or not, and Infonetics found that 91 percent of TippingPoint customers did so, along with 70 percent of Cisco customers, 67 percent of IBM and McAfee customers and about 55 percent of Sourcefire customers.

Reasons cited for not wanting to run IPS in-band were reliability, throughput, traffic latency and false positives.

For those using IPS in-band, the next step is deciding how many of the device's available filters to activate in order to block different types of attack traffic. The survey found those using IPS in-line often didn't apply all the filters in blocking mode, but sometimes simply in alert mode. IPS filters to block were applied far more in TippingPoint and IBM equipment, but much less often in Sourcefire In IBM, Cisco and McAfee equipment, blocking and alert-only were activated about half-and-half in a mixed mode.

According to the survey, filter updates offered by vendors are applied 40 percent to 74 percent of the time, depending on the product.

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