Radware Security Report Debunks Prevailing Myths About Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) Attacks

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Radware Security Report Debunks Prevailing Myths About Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) Attacks

In the "2011 Global Application and Network Security Report", Radware's Emergency Response Team Finds That Size Doesn't Matter and Smaller Attacks can be Deadlier

MAHWAH, New Jersey, February 6, 2012/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ --

    ?

    Contrary to conventional thinking that large bandwidth cyber attacks wreak the most
damage on enterprises, security experts at Radware [http://www.Radware.com ] (NASDAQ:
RDWR) a leading provider of application delivery
[http://www.radware.com/Products/ApplicationDelivery/default.aspx ] and application
security [http://www.radware.com/Products/ApplicationNetworkSecurity/default.aspx ]
solutions for virtual and cloud data centers, instead found that bigger problems usually
come in small packages. That is one of the conclusions published today in the "2011 Global
Application and Network Security Report", a compilation of security findings providing a
view of the state of cyber security worldwide.

    The findings bust several myths about the way the industry views the impact of
distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks. In particular, it challenges the belief that
while a cyber attack may feel catastrophic at the time, most organization may never
experience an intense attack. Also, a smaller, less intensive attack (76 percent of the
attacks surveyed were under 1 Gbps) can cause more damage than DDoS attacks that gobble
ten times the amount of bandwidth.

    The report, prepared by Radware's Emergency Response Team
[http://www.radware.com/Customer/SecurityZone/ERT.aspx ] (ERT), is the product of a
security survey sent to a wide variety of organizations, as well as an analysis of
selected cases that were handled by the ERT that focus on DoS and DDoS attacks and their
mitigation. Combined, they provide an informative and educational look at the types of
attacks experienced, the victims and an overview of mitigation technologies.

    Radware's ERT is a group of dedicated security consultants who are available around
the clock. As literal "first responders" to cyber attacks, Radware's ERT members gained
their extensive experience by successfully dealing with some of the industry's most
notable hacking episodes, providing the knowledge and expertise to mitigate the kind of
attack a business's security team may never have handled. Through the report, the ERT
reveals how their in-the-trenches experiences fighting cyber attacks provide deeper
forensic analysis than surveys alone or academic research.

    Myth Busting

    Although some organizations do incur massive DDoS attacks, many more never experience
a high-magnitude attack, according to the report. Instead, these organizations are brought
down by less intensive, but equally serious attacks. As mentioned earlier, 76 percent of
attacks were less than 1Gbps in bandwidth, with 32 percent less than 10Mbps. Only nine
percent of attacks in 2011 were over 10Gbps.

    A review of cyber attack cases reveals that industry reports capturing public
attention perpetuate a myth that only size counts. The thinking goes that if the bandwidth
is bigger, then the attack is more severe. In fact, Radware's ERT found that the type of
attack is also significant. A much smaller HTTP flood on the application level may do more
damage than a larger UDP flood on the network. When evaluating DoS attacks it is important
to understand both the size and type of attack.

    Other security myths that fall by the wayside in Radware's security report include:

   
    - Firewalls or IPS alone can stop DDoS attacks -- Despite being designed to
      provide network security, firewalls and intrusion prevention systems (IPS) are
      impacted by DDoS attacks. Often the firewall is the weakest link. The report shows
      that in 32 percent of DDoS attacks, the firewall or IPS became the bottleneck. To stop
      DDoS attacks you need dedicated hardware solutions, not IPS and firewall technologies.
    - Content Delivery Network (CDN) providers protect a business against DDOS
      attacks -- The CDN occasionally can handle the less sophisticated, large-volume
      attacks by simply absorbing them (while the target customer will pay for that
      bandwidth, of course, as it was recognized as legitimate traffic). However, as seen by
      the recent cyber attacks that tried to bring down the Israeli financial system and
      national airline, the CDN was easily bypassed by changing the page request in every
      Web transaction. These random request techniques force CDNs to "raise the curtain" and
      forward all the attacks directly to the customer premise, in essence making the CDN
      act as a proxy unloading the attack traffic directly at the target servers.
    - The core DoS attack mitigation strategy is to defend and absorb - Businesses
      can and should have the ability to be proactive in their mitigation steps to stop
      malicious traffic or Website degradation with a strategy for going on the offense.
      This changes the rules in which the attacker always has the edge, and instead, levels
      the playing field. This can be done by identifying the attack tool used as the vehicle
      to carry the attack campaign and expose and exploit its inherent weaknesses to
      neutralize the attack tool in a "passive", non-intrusive way.

    "As the cyber security landscape continues to change with each new wave of attacks,
DoS and DDoS attacks are changing as well and will continue to target organizations with
more gusto than even before," said Avi Chesla, chief technology officer, Radware. "For
example, Radware's 2011 Global Application and Network Security Report proves that in the
past two years all serious cyber attack campaigns include volumetric as well as the low
and slow attacks vectors, both generated simultaneously.

    "Most Internet sites are inherently vulnerable, making it a major challenge for the
average organization to predict whether or not their site will be attacked and what the
volume of that attack might be. The fates of their organizations depend on utilizing the
most advanced defensive and offensive maneuvers against these determined cyber criminals,
and understanding all the intricacies of the current attack landscape," Chesla said.

    Other Report Findings:

   
    - 56% of cyber attacks were targeted at applications; 46 % at the network.
    - Financial Services (28%), Government and eGaming (25% each) sites were
      targeted most.
    - In half of the attacks, companies did not know why they were targets.
      'Hacktivists' with a political or social agenda accounted for 22% of the attacks; 12%
      came from angry users; 7% from the competition and 4% wanted a ransom in exchange for
      freeing the website.
    - DoS attacks became much more organized, professional and complex in 2011 with
      attackers using as many as five different attack vectors in a single attack campaign.
      No one point security tool could effectively block this sophisticated multi-level type
      of attacks. What is needed is a cocktail of techniques that together provide full
      protection.

    Recommendations:

    Radware's ERT recommends these ways businesses can protect against DoS and DDoS
attacks:

   
    1) Collect information about attacks such as type of attacks, size and
      frequency. Use the correct measures for the attack type. For example, the proper
      measurement for UDP floods is in bandwidth and PPS, while the measurement scale for
      HTTP floods is in transactions per second, concurrent connections, and new connections
      per second. The UDP flood may seem larger and more dangerous, but the HTTP
      connection-based attack can cause more damage with much less traffic than the UDP
      attack.
    2) Perform risk analysis at the business level to determine the budget you
      should allocate to improve your business resilience against DDoS attacks.
    3) For bandwidth saturation attacks, make sure your service provider can
      mitigate volumetric attacks that may saturate your bandwidth.
    4) For application attacks, deploy anti-DoS and network behavioral technologies
      on site.
    5) Have a consolidated or "context aware" view into enterprise security with a
      security event information management (SEIM) system. An SEIM system can build a
      centralized architecture that simplifies such tasks as monitoring the millions of
      messages and log records generated by security edge devices. Also, an SEIM is
      essential when prosecuting a perpetrator.
    6) Education and internal security policies are important defense tools, too.
      Regularly refresh technical skills and practical experience within the security group;
      but also help employees be aware of how hackers can exploit opportunities throughout
      the enterprise, especially in the age of 'bring your own device'.

    About the "2011 Global Application & Network Security Report"

    Information for the report came from two sources -- the Radware Security Survey and an
analysis of 40 select cases of cyber attacks conducted by the ERT. The Radware Security
Survey was distributed in the fall of 2011 to security professionals ranging from security
and network managers to executives. The survey consisted of 23 questions on respondents'
DoS experiences, the impact of the DoS attacks they experienced, mitigation techniques,
and in-depth information about the three most severe attacks they experienced. Radware
received 135 responses, most of which were not from current customers.

    The 40 select cases studied by Radware's ERT complemented the survey by providing
deeper, forensic information.

    For more information on Radware's "2011 Global Application & Network Security Report",
go to:

    http://www.radware.com/2011globalsecurityreport

    ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

    Report: "2011 Global Application & Network Security Report"

    http://www.radware.com/2011globalsecurityreport

    Infographic: "2011 Global Application & Network Security Report"

    http://www.radware.com/Resources/callout_b.aspx?content28920

    Blog Article: "DDoS Attacks Myths: Does Size Really Matter?"

    http://blog.radware.com/security/2012/02/ddos-attacks-myths

    ERT Video: "Fight Cyber Attacks with Radware's Emergency Response Team"

    http://youtu.be/BWl0cmeiVMc

    SlideShare Presentation: "2011 Security Report - Emergency Response Team"

    http://www.slideshare.net/Radware/ert-2011-annualreportfinal

    About Radware

    Radware [http://www.radware.com ] (NASDAQ: RDWR), is a global leader of application
delivery [http://www.radware.com/Products/ApplicationDelivery/default.aspx ] and
application security
[http://www.radware.com/Products/ApplicationNetworkSecurity/default.aspx ] solutions for
virtual and cloud data centers. Its award-winning solutions portfolio delivers full
resilience for business-critical applications, maximum IT efficiency, and complete
business agility. Radware's solutions empower more than 10,000 enterprise and carrier
customers worldwide to adapt to market challenges quickly, maintain business continuity
and achieve maximum productivity while keeping costs down. For more information, please
visit http://www.radware.com.

    Radware encourages you to join our community and follow us on; LinkedIn
[http://www.linkedin.com/company/165642 ], Radware Blog [http://blog.radware.com ],
Twitter [http://twitter.com/#!/radware ], YouTube [http://www.youtube.com/radwareinc ] and
the Radware Connect [http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/radware-connect/id391124100?mt=8 ] app
for iPhone(R).

    This press release may contain statements concerning Radware's future prospects that
are "forward-looking statements" under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of
1995. These statements are based on current expectations and projections that involve a
number of risks and uncertainties. There can be no assurance that future results will be
achieved, and actual results could differ materially from forecasts and estimates. These
risks and uncertainties, as well as others, are discussed in greater detail in Radware's
Annual Report on Form 20-F and Radware's other filings with the Securities and Exchange
Commission. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date on which they are made
and Radware undertakes no commitment to revise or update any forward-looking statement in
order to reflect events or circumstances after the date any such statement is made.
Radware's public filings are available from the Securities and Exchange Commission's
website at http://www.sec.gov or may be obtained on Radware's website at
http://www.radware.com.

   
    Corporate Media Relations:
    Michael Lordi
    +1-201-785-3206  (office)
    +1-201-574-3840  (cell)
    mikel@radware.com

Source: Radware Ltd

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