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The New IP: SDN sets a high bar for cybersecurity
Mon, 11th Apr 2016
FYI, this story is more than a year old

In part one of this series we discussed how the next major meta trend in networking will cause global change. Part two took a closer look at changes in the data center. Part three of this series delved into the edge and looked at how it is changing. Part four defined SDN and NFV and their roles for the future. The final chapter will look into the New IP and how it is setting a high bar for cybersecurity.

With old IP networks, security is implemented by devices that are deployed at the edge. However, in the cloud era - where data center and networks converge and access becomes increasingly mobile, the concept of the perimeter disappears. But the good news is that the New IP – a modern approach to networking that emphasises open, automated, software-defined elements to increase agility and reduce costs - allows deployment of security so that the network can be pervasively vigilant.

Security is improved with network virtualisation

Deploying services as Virtualised Network Functions (VNFs) is a simple but powerful approach. Services such as routing, load balancing, application delivery and security, Web and network firewalls, and VPN can be moved in real time and through remote management that does not require physical redeployment and human capital, delivering significant OpEx and CapEx savings. The cost savings deliver the flexibility to distribute functionality more appropriately, but with the same performance. Security can be distributed where needed, or distributed ubiquitously. And services can be removed when no longer needed. This gives the ability to truly customise security by geography or location, by function, by group, by individual or by application.

This embedded security posture allows organisations to address compliance assurance from site to cloud, employee to application resource, and tiering of security via IPsec encryption, remote access VPNs, stateful firewall, and Web application security embedded in virtual routers and virtual application delivery controllers.

Security on an SDN controller

With an underlying network fabric, you can create a simplified flat, VM-aware network topology, inherently increasing security by design. Using flow technologies and a programmable SDN controller allows a centralised view of network behaviour, giving the ability to immediately take action against security threats within the infrastructure and push policies to the network in real time. Advanced messaging can be utilised so that every element in the network automatically generates its state and condition and pushes it to a centralised repository for real-time analysis - a step towards security empowered by machine learning.

Encrypting data-in-flight

With networks constantly under attack, native data encryption from a network device in the data center, LAN and WAN, can protect data going across a link. This can be done without impacting performance or incurring the cost and complexity of back-hauling traffic to specialised devices, and is especially critical when network links are not under an organisation's physical control - such as between data centers, between sites, and between sites and the cloud.

Application and user awareness for client-to-application security

Accessing critical business applications requires multiple layers of protection, with interaction from business-to-consumer increasingly needing more secure web-based application access on a growing apps traffic volume. Application delivery controllers that can handle expanding SSL-based traffic with an integrated Web application firewall are needed, along with the flexibility to target individual users or customer groups with unique security requirements per application.

Security Is open, not closed

With old IP networks, point security appliances such as firewalls, IPS/IDS, DPI, analytics tools, encryption-at-rest and encryption-in-flight, etc., each address specific security challenges. There is no information exchange and collaboration between them, and no security services abstraction layer that takes advantage of key learnings from all sources.

But the New IP – with its hybrid hardware and software implementation, offers a standardised way to interact and communicate with any device or sensor (physical or virtual) via an SDN controller. All the data from sensors can be collected and delivered to an analytics engine for visualisation, identification, and action. The behaviour of any device can be changed as you can communicate, program, and write to it.

Security is based on behaviour, not just identity

New IP networks can consider behaviour rather than just identity when applying security policy. With behaviour-based security, the system gets deeper insights into typical and atypical actions and into preliminary steps in the attack process, allowing it to not only mitigate attacks already occurring but prevent potential attacks. Bear in mind that most breaches have an inside element, so identity management cannot be relied on to detect an attack. A means is needed to detect insider attacks and protect the system against those who have gained legitimate access. Behavioural analysis of risk factors, indicators of what is abnormal activity and detection of out-of-context behaviour is crucial.

Security is self-learning, not static

The security system in New IP architectures is continually learning and self-optimising, unlike traditional systems that rely on pattern matching with databases that get updated periodically. In that case, if an exploit doesn't fit into any of the patterns, the security system doesn't recognise it as a threat. New IP architectures are more agile and can self-improve. Applying Big Data and machine learning concepts to network behaviour allows a change from a reactive to a proactive security posture, from descriptive to predictive analytics, and ultimately, from a static to a self-learning or adaptive network.

The New IP is a modern network, built on your time and your terms. To find out more about the New IP, click here.