Firewall Utilization
Some firewalls permit only
email traffic through them, thereby protecting the network against any attacks
other than attacks against the email service. Other firewalls provide less
strict protections, and block services that are known to be problems.
Generally, firewalls are
configured to protect against unauthenticated interactive logins from the
``outside'' world. This, more than anything, helps prevent vandals from logging
into machines on your network. More elaborate firewalls block traffic from the
outside to the inside, but permit users on the inside to communicate freely with
the outside. The firewall can protect you against any type of network-borne
attack if you unplug it.
Firewalls are also important
since they can provide a single ``choke point'' where security and audit can be
imposed. Unlike in a situation where a computer system is being attacked by
someone dialing in with a modem, the firewall can act as an effective ``phone
tap'' and tracing tool. Firewalls provide an important logging and auditing
function; often they provide summaries to the administrator about what kinds and
amount of traffic passed through it, how many attempts there were to break into
it, etc.
This is an important point:
providing this ``choke point'' can serve the same purpose on your network as a
guarded gate can for your site's physical premises. That means anytime you have
a change in ``zones'' or levels of sensitivity, such a checkpoint is
appropriate. A company rarely has only an outside gate and no receptionist or
security staff to check badges on the way in. If there are layers of security on
your site, it's reasonable to expect layers of security on your network.
Definition
| Importance |
Types | Firewall
Utility |Viruses
| Limitation