[ISN] Congress' role in IT security debated

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Thu Nov 06 2003 - 22:56:17 PST

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    http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/story/0,10801,86902,00.html
    
    By Grant Gross
    NOVEMBER 06, 2003
    
    A U.S. House of Representatives member proposed today that Congress
    require every computer to have antivirus software installed. But IT
    security experts disagreed with that suggestion and proposed other
    ways for the government to encourage cybersecurity among private
    companies and individual users.
    
    Rep. Charles Bass (R-N.H.) during a hearing questioned whether
    Congress should require that antivirus software be installed on every
    U.S. computer to counter the billions of dollars in damage done by
    viruses and worms in 2003 alone.
    
    "Is it time for the federal government to develop some kind of
    Internet security agency that would develop standards for all
    legitimate software, require automatic update and patching and
    establish a base level for every single computer in the country?" Bass
    said during a hearing on computer viruses by the House Energy and
    Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the
    Internet. "Is there any reason why any computer in this country
    shouldn't have some kind of antivirus software on it as a
    requirement?"
    
    No such reason exists, said Art Wong, vice president of security
    response for antivirus software vendor Symantec Corp., prompting some
    laughs from the audience.
    
    But other witnesses at the hearing expressed doubt over whether
    computer users would accept such a requirement. The outcry from users
    over their rights being trampled would be "shocking," said Ken Silva,
    vice president of VeriSign Inc.
    
    "What you're proposing is tantamount to trimming a little fat off the
    Constitution," Silva told Bass. "Smart computer users would in fact
    update their software, but I'm just not sure that any kind of federal
    agency that required automatic updates on people's computers for all
    of their software is something that the public would tolerate."
    
    Beyond a debate about the rights of computer users, an antivirus
    mandate could cause problems on computers not set up to run antivirus
    software, including ones used for factory automation or power or water
    treatment plants, said Bill Hancock, CEO of the Internet Security
    Alliance. "The result is certain infrastructure would go 'splat' and
    not work at all," he said of Bass' antivirus and update suggestions.
    
    The witnesses also disagreed on other ways to encourage cybersecurity.  
    Software vendors should be pressed to write code that's less buggy,
    said Richard Pethia, director of the CERT Coordination Center at
    Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Other witnesses representing
    software vendors downplayed that issue.
    
    Trying to figure out how to build better software is "a no-win
    situation and just beating a dead horse," Silva said.
    
    Silva and Hancock suggested that Congress promote cybersecurity
    education, with Silva recommending that it shift some federal funding
    to grade and high school education for cybersecurity awareness.
    
    But Pethia said he doubts education efforts could reach enough
    computer users, saying instead that software vendors need to be
    accountable. "The probability that we can drag 150 million users up
    that learning curve is relatively small," he said.
    
    Hancock and Robert Holleyman, president and CEO of the Business
    Software Alliance, also called for Congress to commit more law
    enforcement resources to fighting cybercrime. "Law enforcement is
    typically hampered due to a lack of tools, a lack of investment and a
    lack of skill sets," Hancock said.
    
    Fewer than 10 virus or worm writers were arrested worldwide in 2002,
    while more than 200 viruses and worms were unleashed on the Internet,
    he said.
    
    Holleyman called for Congress to push for international agreements to
    enforce cybercrime laws and to create a "culture of security"  
    worldwide. U.S. laws alone will not solve cybersecurity problems,
    because some countries will continue to harbor hackers and spammers,
    he said.
    
    Even if the U.S. has international agreements with some countries,
    hackers and spammers will continue to find places to operate if U.S.  
    laws drive them offshore, Hancock said. Responding to a question about
    how a federal antispam law would limit the spread of viruses and worms
    through e-mail, Hancock said Romania has one cybercrime investigator.  
    "This guy is grossly overwhelmed," Hancock said.
    
    Rep. Gene Green (D-Texas) pushed his antispam legislation, the
    Anti-Spam Act of 2003, as a way to fight the spread of viruses and
    worms. "The combination of e-mail spam and viruses is like putting a
    SARS patient on every airline flight in the country," he said.
    
    Asked what motivates virus and worm writers, Hancock said many of them
    are dysfunctional people with limited social skills, but he predicted
    that cybercrime will increasingly be carried out by criminals with
    political or terrorist motives. Currently, virus trackers see activity
    jump between 4 p.m. Pacific time Fridays and 9 p.m. Pacific time
    Sundays, as "every kid without a date starts picking on the network,"  
    Hancock said.
    
    
    
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