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Get the definitive reference for planning and implementing security features in Windows Server 2008 with expert insights from Microsoft Most Valuable Professionals (MVPs) and the Windows Server Security Team at Microsoft. This official Microsoft RESOURCE KIT delivers the in-depth, technical information and tools you need to help protect your Windows® based clients, server roles, networks, and Internet services. Leading security experts explain how to plan and implement comprehensive security with special emphasis on new Windows security tools, security objects, security services, user authentication and access control, network security, application security, Windows Firewall, Active Directory® security, group policy, auditing, and patch management. The kit also provides best practices based on real-world implementations. You also get must-have tools, scripts, templates, and other key job aids, including an eBook of the entire RESOURCE KIT on CD.
Key Book Benefits
Definitive technical information and expert insights straight
from the Windows Server Security Team and leading Microsoft
MVPs
Provides in-depth information that every Windows administrator
needs to know about helping protect Windows-based
environments
Includes best practices from real-world
implementations
CD includes additional job aids, including tools, scripts, and a
fully searchable version of the entire RESOURCE KIT book
Q&A with Jesper M. Johansson, author
of Windows Server 2008 Security Resource
Kit
The credentials of the contributors to Windows Server 2008
Security Resource Kit are quite impressive. How important was it to
assemble such a group for this title?
In my opinion, it was necessary. Server products are necessarily
complex, and security, by its very nature, requires a very broad
understanding of the product. Developing that understanding in a
single person is possible, but very time consuming and still does
not lead to the breadth of perspective that you find in a group of
people. No single person can truly understand both what it is like
to implement Active Directory in a 50,000 seat organization, and
how to run a 50-seat small business network long-term, and neither
of them is probably going to also be one of the world's foremost
experts on implementing public key cryptography infrastructures. By
putting together this world-wide team of experts (representing four
countries on three continents) we were able to produce a resource
that had far more depth and breadth of knowledge than would
otherwise have been possible, and you get the expertise of 12 of
the foremost experts on Windows Security in a single package.
What extras are available on the Resource Kit CD?
First, you get a bonus chapter on Rights Management Services, as
well as an electronic copy of the entire book. I am very excited
about the electronic copy because it provides a searchable way to
read the book. These types of books are always used as references
and being able to search it is very valuable.
You also get some tools that may come in handy for managing
servers. Scripting Guru Ed Wilson wrote some custom PowerShell
scripts specifically for this book to manage user accounts and
other security related aspects of your deployment. In addition, I
wrote a couple of tools for the book. One is my password generator,
which I first made available several years ago. It enables you to
manage unique administrator account passwords and service account
passwords on hundreds or thousands of servers on a network. I also
included my elevation tools, which allow you to launch an elevated
instance of Windows Explorer, as well as elevating any command you
want from the command line. Having worked with User Account Control
(UAC) daily for about two years I find that one of the biggest
impediments to running under UAC is the multiple prompts you get
when you perform many file operations. As an administrator, that is
a very common task. Elevating Windows Explorer lets you do those
operations with a single elevation prompt, and still leave UAC
turned on.
Comparing the two programs, what are some of the fundamental
differences between Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server
2003?
To me, the biggest difference is the fact that while Windows Server
2003 was built under the security best practices of 2002, Windows
Server 2008 incorporates all the secure development practices
Microsoft learned in the five years since. The field of secure
software development has progressed immensely between 2002 and
2007, and incorporating them will make Windows Server 2008 much
more able to stand up to the threats we will see in the next five
years. By the way, it is with a heavy heart that I say that, as I
worked hard on security in Windows Server 2003, but it is
true.
Apart from the engineering process, the first thing people will
notice is the completely new management model in Windows Server
2008. Instead of installing a lot of separate components, you now
deploy roles to the server. This makes a lot of sense because the
roles are what you bought the server to fill. By implementing that
metaphor in the management tools the risk for misconfiguration is
greatly reduced.
The new kernel features are also very important and will make a big
difference for many. First, the new virtualization features are
fundamentally going to change how we build and run data centers.
The improvements in security, reliability, and performance in the
kernel features, such as thread scheduling, and in the networking
features, such as the new network file system, also are going to be
valuable to many.
What do you feel is the biggest security oversight made by
network admins?
Put a slightly different way, the area where I see the most room
for improvement is in security posture management. Administrators
are far too focused on vulnerabilities and on the types of
"hardening" tweaks that were useful in the 1990s, when software
shipped wide open by default. Today, those things are not nearly as
important as it is to manage the security posture of your servers.
Far too many administrators still believe in the perimeter and fail
to recognize that just about every organizational network today is
semi-hostile, at best. The biggest security oversight is not to
analyze and manage the threats posed to servers by other actors on
the network. The Security Resource Kit goes into depth in
discussing what I refer to as Network Threat Modeling, as the
analysis phase of Server and Domain Isolation – probably the
most powerful security tool in the arsenal today. Yet, the
proportion of networks that use these tools is infinitesimal.
What are your thoughts on the constant hype surrounding
potential security flaws in Vista?
As I have written elsewhere
(http://msinfluentials.com/blogs/jesper/?archive/2008/01/24/do-vista-users-need-?fewer-patches-than-xp-users.aspx)
I fail to see any data backing up the argument. Certainly, there
have been flaws in Vista – and anyone who expected it to be
flawless was unrealistic – but the improvements are
tremendous over Windows XP. Windows Vista has about half as many
critical problems as Windows XP in the same time-frame. I'm not
sure that it would have been reasonable to expect it to perform
much better than that given how large and complex modern software
is and how fast the security landscape is moving.
Therefore, I have to think that the reasons for the hype are
something other than data. The popular press seems to operate on
the assumption that complaining about Microsoft generates
advertising revenue, and they are probably correct. The fact of the
matter today is that a significant portion of the software
industry, specifically the security portion, has built its business
almost exclusively on selling software that purports to protect
Microsoft's customers from Microsoft's screw-ups. It is simply
terrifying to it, and a grave threat to its business model, that
Microsoft should actually manage to produce software, and
particularly operating systems, that are so secure they do not need
most of the products that portion of the industry sells.
The popular press, being a largely advertising funded business, has
happily latched on to this perception and boosted the
unsubstantiated claims of Windows Vista's vulnerability to the
benefit of their major advertisers. It is truly a sick eco-system
that harms the customer in both the short and long term. The
threats today, as I mentioned above, are trending toward the types
of things that the security software industry cannot protect
against. The new threats are against people, and the focus needs to
shift to helping people make better security decisions and take
responsibility for their own actions. Unfortunately, the current
unsubstantiated hype about Windows Vista is not about protecting
customers, it is about selling unnecessary security software and
inculcating users and IT managers alike in the belief that they
must buy third party software to run Windows safely; a belief that,
with a few notable exceptions, such as anti-virus software, is
falsified by the data. In fact, the hype has even lead to a huge
growth industry in malicious, fake, security software. I have seen
a lot of people lured by the hype into buying security software
that is not security software at all, but simply malware in
disguise. The average consumer, inundated with hype, is unable to
make out what to really believe. This sick ecosystem is harmful and
the press and the pundits are not helping, but only increasing the
hype.
In your opinion, which network faces the biggest security risk
today: the small office with multiple power users or large
corporation with a large LUA base?
The unmanaged networks. I have seen very well managed and very
secure networks in both small and large organizations, and I have
seen poorly managed and very insecure networks in both as well. It
is not really a matter of size but of how much time and effort is
put into the security aspects of it. One of the largest weaknesses
seems to be training. Security today is about end-points. The
attacks are against people far more prevalent than those against
technology and vulnerabilities. We need to, as an industry,
understand how to push the security out to the assets that we are
trying to protect. In the past we have centralized security because
it was a way to centralize management of security. The challenge
now is to de-centralize security, while still permitting
centralized management. This is a non-trivial task, but it must be
done. As a starting point, I dare every IT manager to start
analyzing the risks to his or her network, and specifically, what
it is they want the network to be used for. Once you understand
what it is you want the network to provide you have a chance to
work on making it provide that and nothing else. To me, that is the
most important thing we can do. A properly staffed IT group, with
adequate training and resources to train its users, an
organizational mandate to protect the organization's assets, and a
keen understanding of the business they serve will build a network
that is adequately secured regardless of the size of the network.
Windows Server 2008 certainly provides some very powerful
technologies to help you manage security in your network, but while
that is a necessary component, it is insufficient by itself. At a
very base level, it is about the people and the processes you have,
more than about the technology. Technology will help, but it is
just a tool that your people will implement using a process that
helps or hurts.
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Top Level Categories:
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Information Technology & Software Development > Networking
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Product > Microsoft Windows Server 2008
Vendor > Microsoft
The publisher has provided additional content related to this title.
Description | Content |
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Visit the catalog page for Windows Server® 2008 Security Resource Kit |
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Visit the errata page for Windows Server® 2008 Security Resource Kit |
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Download the supplemental electronic content for Windows Server® 2008 Security Resource Kit |
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