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Traditionally, all anti-virus programs and IPS systems work using signature-based techniques. However, this doesn't help much to prevent zero-day attacks.

Therefore, what can be done to prevent zero-day attacks?

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  • 1
    In addition to the points in the answer I suggested below, even if you run some software with a zero-day exploit. If you don't run that system on the public internet, then you are not directly vulnerable. Hence firewalls are your friend, and if you really want to run some new-fangled security risk software, then you can set it up on some other network in the cloud, where it can get hacked and not effect any other systems.
    – Tom
    May 22, 2012 at 10:35
  • 0-day and unknown threats are exactly why heuristics are used in any antivirus/anti-malware software worth the name. Unfortunately heuristics are often disabled because of the performance hit. May 22, 2012 at 11:31
  • 0days is just a category, each member of this category is very different from the other. You cannot have an approach where you consider implementing security against 0days. It's the quality of your security system that in the end will make the difference between a successful stealthy intrusion and a non-working exploit or a detected exploit. As someone said, focus on detection and quick response time. Monitor each system, traffic and keep up to date with security updates. It's a full time job, or at least, it should be.
    – Aki
    May 23, 2012 at 6:35
  • Probably get some good answers from here too - security.stackexchange.com
    – Bratch
    May 23, 2012 at 15:13
  • linux everywhere. no windows. ask google. Dec 13, 2012 at 7:07

8 Answers 8

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I think you acknowledge an interesting sys-admin truth there, which is that

unless you can reduce the probability of being hacked to zero then eventually, at some point, you are going to get hacked.

This is just a basic truth of maths and probability, that for any non-zero probability of an event. The event eventually happens...

So the 2 golden rules for reducing the impact of this "eventually hacked" event are these;

  1. The principle of least privilege

    You should configure services to run as a user with the least possible rights necessary to complete the service's tasks. This can contain a hacker even after they break in to a machine.

    As an example, a hacker breaking into a system using a zero-day exploit of the Apache webserver service is highly likely to be limited to just the system memory and file resources that can be accessed by that process. The hacker would be able to download your html and php source files, and probably look into your mysql database, but they should not be able to get root or extend their intrusion beyond apache-accessible files.

    Many default Apache webserver installations create the 'apache' user and group by default and you can easily configure the main Apache configuration file (httpd.conf) to run apache using those groups.

  2. The principle of separation of privileges

    If your web site only needs read-only access to the database, then create an account that only has read-only permissions, and only to that database.

    SElinux is a good choice for creating context for security, app-armor is another tool. Bastille was a previous choice for hardening.

    Reduce the consequence of any attack, by separating the power of the service that has been compromised into it own "Box".

Silver Rules are also good.

Use the tools available. (It's highly unlikely that you can do as well as the guys who are security experts, so use their talents to protect yourself.)

  1. public key encryption provides excellent security. use it. everywhere.
  2. users are idiots, enforce password complexity
  3. understand why you are making exceptions to the rules above. review your exceptions regularly.
  4. hold someone to account for failure. it keeps you on your toes.
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  • I think this is the truth - by definition, there's not much you can do to prevent a 0-day exploit. If you have vulnerable software you have vulnerable software - therefore, the only course of action is to reduce any impact and attack surface. Excellent point about firewalls, though worth bearing in mind that a 0-day exploit for MS Outlook could be sent by e-mail, for example.
    – Dan
    May 22, 2012 at 10:47
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    Yep, point taken about the MS mail products. But there are analogies to firewalls for mail, for example anyone with all the VBscript, ActiveX, OLE type extensions disabled would have missed all the hacking completely, blissfully unaware of the carnage... ;-)
    – Tom
    May 22, 2012 at 11:11
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    +1 but wrt to Silver Rule 1 "Whoever thinks his problem can be solved using cryptography, doesn't understand his problem and doesn't understand cryptography." - Needham/Lampson ;)
    – Peanut
    May 22, 2012 at 20:56
  • @Peanut I like public key because it avoids the use of passwords. After the theoretical intrusion, there is no need to reset passwords because, there are no passwords to reset, and only the public key is compromised. Even a hashed password database can be used to verify, or offline crack accounts.
    – Tom
    May 23, 2012 at 7:06
  • @TomH My comment was tongue in cheek :) Interesting, so in your system presumably the server sends the client a nonce + other data to sign and the client uses a username + the signed data to log in?
    – Peanut
    May 23, 2012 at 12:56
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Whitelist, don't blacklist

You're describing a blacklist approach. A whitelist approach would be much safer.

An exclusive club will never try to list everyone who can't come in; they will list everyone who can come in and exclude those not on the list.

Similarly, trying to list everything that shouldn't access a machine is doomed. Restricting access to a short list of programs/IP addresses/users would be more effective.

Of course, like anything else, this involves some trade-offs. Specifically, a whitelist is massively inconvenient and requires constant maintenance.

To go even further in the tradeoff, you can get great security by disconnecting the machine from the network.

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    The danger is in such a ruleset growing into a size where it cannot be understood,maintained,explained,audited. Which is deadly. May 23, 2012 at 1:26
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Detection is Easier (and More Reliable) Than Prevention

By definition you cannot prevent a zero day attack. As others have pointed out, you can do a lot to reduce the impact of a zero day attack, and you should, but that is not the end of the story.

Let me point out that in addition, you should devote resources to detecting when an attack has occurred, what the attacker did, and how the attacker did it. Comprehensive and secure logging of all activities that a hacker might undertake will both make it easier to detect an attack and, more importantly, determine the damage done and remediation required to recover from the attack.

In many financial services contexts, the cost of security in terms of delays and overhead in executing transactions is so high that it makes more sense to focus resources on detecting and reversing fraudulent transactions rather than to take extensive measures designed to prevent them in the first place. The theory is that no amount of measures will be 100% effective, so the detection and reversal mechanisms need to be built anyway. Moreover, this approach has withstood the test of time.

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    +1 Yep, I guess you can't respond if you don't know its happened... given another chance to answer I would have probably stuck in something about SANS 6 steps...
    – Tom
    May 23, 2012 at 5:37
  • +1, very true. Prevention would require auditing. And auditing can't prove that a system doesn't have any fault.
    – Aki
    May 23, 2012 at 6:32
  • @Tom, you can always edit your answer.
    – Old Pro
    May 23, 2012 at 7:13
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Zero day doesn't mean that signature is not known. It means that there's no patch available to users of software, that closes vulnerability. So IPS is useful to protect from exploiting zero-day vulnerabilities. But you should not rely only on it. Create and follow a solid security policy, harden your servers, update software, and always have a 'Plan B'

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Grsecurity or SELinux are good in helping to prevent 0 day attacks by hardening the kernel.

Quote from website "Only grsecurity provides protection against zero-day and other advanced threats that buys administrators valuable time while vulnerability fixes make their way out to distributions and production testing. "

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If you are using Apache, modules such as mod_security can help you prevent common attack vectors. With mod_security you can

  • block requests looking like SQL injection attacks
  • block clients which IP addresses are blacklisted at some RBL
  • redirect the request to some other place if the some conditions you define are met
  • block requests based on client country
  • detect & block common malicious bots automatically

... and much, much more. Of course, using a complex module like mod_security it's quite possible to also block your actual clients, and on the server side mod_security adds some overhead.

It's also mandatory to keep your server software updated and to make sure you have disabled each and every module & daemon you won't use.

Tight firewall policies are a must and in many cases additional security enhancements such as SELinux or grsecurity might stop the attack.

But, whatever you do, the bad guys are very patient, very creative and very skilled. Have a detailed plan what to do when you get hacked.

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I'd like to add a few bronze rules:

  1. If exposed, do not run what does not need running.

  2. Do not make yourself a target worthy of a dedicated,targeted attack.

  3. Securing against any such targeted attack possible is often uneconomical/impractical anyway. Check who could have a serious interest in breaking what and start there.

  4. Considering "minimizing externally available information" and "going away from well known defaults" as nothing more than security by obscurity (often misunderstood as "worthless" as opposed to "a layer that in itself in insufficient") and omitting it is dangerous arrogance. A hackable lock on a door will not keep the thief out but probably will keep out the wolf.

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A bloated machine with a huge security suite often makes mediocre PC's into dinosaurs and quad Cores into ordinary old pcs. I have fixed enough ( thousands) to understand that is mostly true. If you understand nothing is 100% security and the cost of performance drops exponentially as security while probability of infection only drops linear fashion. Most results when I stopped looking at comparisons were 90% max on a real world test of thousands of risks, meaning 10% of the infections were undetected or too late. while PC latency had increased 200 to 900%. OSX has an ideal situation where it essential is no better in security but the risks of attack were smaller due to being smaller targets with only 4% of market-share in non-phone/pad products in 2010. That will change but I wont change my philosophy of keeping my OS clean, lean & mean. I do the same for XP and Win7. I have a hige arsenal of repair tools but only need one app to fix everyone who gets infected and it only takes 10 to 20 minutes not hours or days.

My methods that work;

  1. Educate the users, dont click on security warnings unless you really know what they are as opposed to the hundreds of ROgues that are carbon copies of good alerts. THose who cant be trained easily get non-admin accounts and sand-boxed browsers with java and JS disabled. But if I enable it for them, no worry, only 15~20 minutes to restore or repair.

    1. SYstem Restore is good, but has many limitations , one being that items in your Documents folder and User Temp folders are protected where rogue drivers can get installed and startup and infect you on the next boot.

    2. UAC is useful for many things but such a PITA that I never use and rely on better tools to detect startups and /or new processes, including but not limited to;

      • Winpatrol.com still the best investment I made for security and still free for others. It covers 80% of the issues where startups get added before executed and can be detected and disabled or deleted by user prompt. However if you are the anxious sort who can not make decisions take a pill or just use Windows Defender. Not the best for coverage but one of the highest for bang/buck ratio.. pretection/loss of performace or rise in latency ratio.

      • Mike Lin's startup utility is the lightest interceptor of startups that are stored in over a dozen locations of the registry

      • Script Guard is a useful script interceptor for kiddy scripts

      • ProcessGuard an old defunct program that works like a firewall for any new exectuable , but nags you for approval, however it is secure and lean after you accept a trusted source or ignore or block an untrusted source.

      • A Blacklist add-on for your browser is good like Web of trust (WOT) , but Chrome has part of included in a similar fashion but to a smaller extent.

      • a blacklist can get huge for HOSTS files and if you use this (>1MB is huge when scanned in 4KB chunks every 10 minutes. , But if you do, I highly recommend disabing DNS caching service to reduce the redunant periodic scans by every App that is active with firewall privies.

      • Disable File Indexing if you dont really use it for email and things, because it spawns your AV suite to scan every file accessed every time, again and again.. how redundant.

Some may take exception to this partial list off the top of my head, but I save time securing my PC and operating in a lean environment. Regular audits to confirm my security are done at night prove my worry free practise is justified. I still have a thousand HJT logs, combofix.txt logs and Runscanner logs to support my opinions of cures and better security/ performance balance.

  • Avoid careless download/installing of exe's or windows media files which can execute scipts (eg .WMA, .WMV ) unlike .mp3 or .avi.

  • Avoid all ads targetted big buttons to download or update your security which may distract your attention to the free update on download aggregators like hippo dot com .. cnet is not bad. Be very careful. Some sites use 3rd party ads and have no content control.

  • I documented one perect example in a 10 page powerpoint presentation, if anyone is interested, ask. How easy ignoring the above adive can get you infected.

All for now.

Tony Stewart EE since 1975.

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