nanog mailing list archives
Re: The view from the other side of the fence
From: Sean Donelan <sean () donelan com>
Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2002 08:00:41 -0500 (EST)
On Wed, 13 Mar 2002, Rajesh Talpade wrote:
A network is only as secure as its weakest link.... sounds like a cliche, but am afraid this least-common-denominator rule will hold as networks converge.
Is there anything we can do to improve this? How can we make sure the people who "need-to-know" find out how to secure their weakest links instead of waiting for each company to stumble along their learning curve. The usual answer is hire an expert (or SAIC :-). But there aren't enough qualified experts to go around in the best of circumstances. The problems include divergent cultures, technologies, and even generations. Until the technology crash, the so-called next generation networking companies didn't want to "converge" with the existing companies; they wanted to wipe them out. There wasn't a lot of sharing between the different groups, even within the same company. I'm not sure one security approach is better than the other, but they mix like oil and water when you combine traditional telephone security and Internet security methods.
Current thread:
- The view from the other side of the fence Sean Donelan (Mar 09)
- Re: The view from the other side of the fence Scott Madley (Mar 11)
- Re: The view from the other side of the fence Sean Donelan (Mar 13)
- Re: The view from the other side of the fence Jake Khuon (Mar 13)
- Re: The view from the other side of the fence Rajesh Talpade (Mar 13)
- Re: The view from the other side of the fence Sean Donelan (Mar 13)
- Re: The view from the other side of the fence Jake Khuon (Mar 13)
- Re: The view from the other side of the fence Sean Donelan (Mar 13)
- Re: The view from the other side of the fence batz (Mar 13)
- Re: The view from the other side of the fence Scott Madley (Mar 11)