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The Internet of Things Changes Everything for Security

At RSA conference, Cisco execs lay out security strategy for networked world.

SAN FRANCISCO — The emerging Internet of Everything is poised to change everything for cybersecurity. That was the message from a pair of Cisco executives Thursday at the 2014 RSA Conference.

“We’re not controlling and managing inanimate objects or devices; we’re gradually figuring out how to control and manage that interaction of those devices with people,” said Padmasree Warrior, Cisco’s chief technology and strategy officer, during an afternoon keynote at the annual security conference.
 
Warrior and Christopher Young, senior vice president of the company’s security business group, shared a comprehensive strategy for securing the much-ballyhooed Internet of Things paradigm, an environment comprising billions of connected devices and apps that can all be managed remotely with modern technology.
 
The network administrators of tomorrow can’t approach the ever-changing landscape of networked objects and programs the way they do today. Instead, they’ll need to adopt a two-step approach that monitors device users through traditional means like authentication and validation, but also monitors the characteristics and state of the devices in use.
 
“We have to figure out how to bridge both these sets of features together,” Warrior said.
 
For his part, Young laid out a three-point strategy to address the situation.

1.    Enhanced visibility. An air traffic control-like system where devices and processes are monitored in real time for their behavior and destinations.
2.    Increased threat awareness. A greater cognizance of the interactions between different elements of network infrastructure so anomalies will be more easily caught.
3.    Quick action. The ability of cybersecurity professionals to act quickly when threats are detected, which will require streamlining threat remediation strategies and cleaning up bureaucratic hurdles.

Warrior pointed to Cisco’s Open App ID initiative as a way to strengthen cyberdefense. The program lets open source developers contribute code that helps users identify applications over the Internet. Enhanced identification features will provide greater control and management of applications accessed over the network.
 
She and Young discussed challenges ahead, but their tone was optimistic.
 
“We come together at places like the RSA conference and we challenge our assumptions, and try to come up with ways for a new security model,” Young said. “This year’s going to be no different for us at the RSA conference.”
 
Young also announced the launch of Cisco’s Internet of Things Security Grand Challenge which invites security experts from around the world to submit solutions to security challenges triggered by the Internet of Things. The contest will award $50,000 to $75,000 to as many as six recipients, according to the company.
 
Young stressed the need for a shift in the cybersecurity framework to accommodate the rapid development and obsolescence of technology offerings.
 
“The pace of change in our business is accelerating rapidly,” he said. “We’re in a world today where things are changing so quickly that the useful life of our products and solutions is declining at a rate that’s difficult to keep up with.

Noelle Knell is the executive editor for e.Republic, responsible for setting the overall direction for e.Republic’s editorial platforms, including Government Technology, Governing, Industry Insider, Emergency Management and the Center for Digital Education. She has been with e.Republic since 2011, and has decades of writing, editing and leadership experience. A California native, Noelle has worked in both state and local government, and is a graduate of the University of California, Davis, with majors in political science and American history.