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Cisco Systems Will Be Auditing Their Code For Backdoors (cisco.com)

An anonymous reader writes: In the wake of the discovery of two backdoors on Juniper's NetScreen firewall devices, Cisco Systems has announced that they will be reviewing the software running on their devices, just in case. Anthony Grieco, a Senior Director of the Security and Trust Organization at Cisco, made sure to first point out that the popular networking equipment manufacturer has a "no backdoor" policy. According to Grieco, Although our normal practices should detect unauthorized software, we recognize that no process can eliminate all risk. Our additional review includes penetration testing and code reviews by engineers with deep networking and cryptography experience. The reviewers will be looking for backdoors, hardcoded or undocumented account credentials, covert communication channels and undocumented traffic diversions.

8 of 128 comments (clear)

  1. You mean by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They havent been already?

    1. Re:You mean by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, time and again their products have exploits that had fixes for a long time. No one should use cisco products, they aren't secure.

      You're an idiot. If you're a Carrier network or large Enterprise, you have two options- Juniper or Cisco. Nobody else makes hardware that even comes close when you're talking routing and switching. IF Cisco (or Juniper) were as insecure as you claim, the entire internet would have been completely owned long ago.

      Yes, there have been issues at times with various specific product lines. But neither Cisco's primary IOS nor Juniper's Junos have ever had a large-scale issue in regards to security, and what issues have shown up over the years have been simple to mitigate or render moot, and are fixed quickly... usually long before the media ever gets wind of it. Most of the problems show up in the crappier low-end product lines, or platforms that are already end of life.

      There's no good reason you should even have the device's management interface directly exposed to the public internet. Period. If you want to be able to remotely manage your equipment, you setup a VPN which will then give access to your internal, privately addressed (i.e. not publicly routable) management network, and access the equipment from the inside. You should ***NEVER*** be able to directly open a connection, either via SSH or any other method, from the 'wild' internet... it's just flat out stupid even if there are no flaws in your equipment.

    2. Re:You mean by davester666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They also need to check if any the employee's with code change privileges have been getting outside bonus's from the NSA.

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    3. Re:You mean by fizzer06 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Up until now, they have been auditing their backdoor for code.

  2. Good PR I suppose by The-Ixian · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But what happens if they DO actually find something? Will they reveal it? I am guessing not.

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  3. Thank goodness... by krashnburn200 · · Score: 5, Funny

    All our back doors are working fine!

  4. Why we need access to the *complete* set of code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    As one of the developers behind similar devices I can say we need access to the complete set of code and we don't have it. Even if Cisco does an audit they won't be able to ensure the complete set of code isn't back-doored. I work for a company that designs and manufactures routers, switches, and similar gear. There are at least a few bits which we don't have the complete sources for. For example all the devices with 802.11ac chips in them. If any one of these peices contain a backdoor we wouldn't know it. It is a major major security issue. Any number of parties besides the NSA might be backdooring *every* device and because there are nonly a very small handful of companies with the code for these pieces it is highly likely that all of our systems are backdoored. Desktops, laptops, tablets, and most routers. There are probably only a few exceptions to this where the complete set of sources are available. I'd suggest checking out www.librecmc.org for consumer routers as it's the only embedded distribution I can confirm is back-door free for those devices which are supported.

  5. But will they analyze the C compiler? by Nutria · · Score: 3, Insightful
    --
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