Slide 1 Enterprise Key Management Infrastructure (EKMI) Arshad Noor CTO, StrongAuth, Inc. Chair, EKMI TC – OASIS
[email protected] Slide 2 Business Challenge Regulatory Compliance –PCI-DSS, PCSA, HIPAA, FISMA, EU Directive Avoiding Fines –ChoicePoint ($15M), Nationwide Building Society ($2M), University of California – LLNL ($4M) Avoiding Lawsuits –TJX (multiple), Bank of America Avoiding costs due to security breaches –TJX ($150M) Slide 3 The Encryption Problem ● Generate ● Encrypt ● Decrypt ● Escrow ● Authorize ● Recover ● Destroy ● Generate ● Encrypt ● Decrypt ● Escrow ● Authorize ● Recover ● Destroy ● Generate ● Encrypt ● Decrypt ● Escrow ● Authorize ● Recover ● Destroy ● Generate ● Encrypt ● Decrypt ● Escrow ● Authorize ● Recover ● Destroy ● Generate ● Encrypt ● Decrypt ● Escrow ● Authorize ● Recover ● Destroy ● Generate ● Encrypt ● Decrypt ● Escrow ● Authorize ● Recover ● Destroy.........and on and on Slide 4 Key Management Silos Slide 5 What is an EKMI? An Enterprise Key Management Infrastructure is: “A collection of technology, policies and procedures for managing all cryptographic keys in the enterprise.” Slide 6 Characteristics of an EKMI ● A single place to define EKM policy ● A single place to manage all keys ● Standard protocols for EKM services ● Platform and Application-independent ● Scalable to service millions of clients ● Available even when network fails ● Extremely secure Slide 7 EKMI Harmony Slide 8 The Encryption Solution WAN SKS Server Generate Protect Escrow Authorize Recover Destroy Encrypt Decrypt PKI Server Issue & Manage Credentials Encrypt Decrypt Encrypt Decrypt Encrypt Decrypt Encrypt Decrypt Encrypt Decrypt Slide 9 EKMI Components ● Public Key Infrastructure ● For digital certificate management; used for strong- authentication, and secure storage & transport of symmetric encryption keys ● Symmetric Key Management System ● SKS Server for symmetric key management ● SKCL for client interactions with SKS Server ● EKMI = PKI + SKMS Slide 10 SKMS – SKS Server Contains all symmetric encryption keys – Generates, escrows and retrieves keys – ACLs authorizing access to encryption keys – Central policy for symmetric keys: Key-size, key-type, key-lifetime, etc. – Accepts SKSML protocol requests – Functions like a DNS-server Slide 11 SKMS - SKCL Symmetric Key Client Library – Communicates with SKS Server – Requests (new or old) symmetric keys – Caches keys locally (KeyCachePolicy) – Encrypts & Decrypts data (KeyUsePolicy) Supports 3DES, AES-128, AES-192 & AES-256 – Makes SKSML requests – Functions like DNS-client library Slide 12 SKMS - SKSML Symmetric Key Services Markup Language – Request new symmetric key(s) from SKS server, when Encrypting new information, or Rotating symmetric keys – Request existing symmetric key(s) from SKS server for decrypting previously encrypted ciphertext – Request key-cache-policy information for client Slide 13 SKMS Big Picture DB Server Crypto Module Application Server Crypto Module SKCL C/C++ Application RPG Application Java Application Key Cache JNIRPGNI Server Client Network 1 2 3 4 5 6 1. Client Application makes a request for a symmetric key 2. SKCL makes a digitally signed request to the SKS 3. SKS verifies SKCL request, generates, encrypts, digitally signs & escrows key in DB 4. Crypto HSM provides security for RSA Signing & Encryption keys of SKS 5. SKS responds to SKCL with signed and encrypted symmetric key 6. SKCL verifies response, decrypts key and hands it to the Client Application 7. Native (non-Java) applications make requests through Java Native Interface 77 Slide 14 SKMS Security Symmetric keys are encrypted with SKS server's RSA public-key for secure storage Client requests are digitally signed (RSA) Server responses are digitally signed (RSA) and encrypted (RSA) All database records are digitally signed (RSA) when stored, and verified when accessed – including history logs – for message integrity Slide 15 Common KM Problems Using proprietary encryption algorithm “Hiding” encryption key on the machine Embedding encryption key in software Encrypting symmetric key with another Using a single key across the enterprise Backing up key with data on the same tape Using weak passwords for Password-Based- Encryption (PBE) No key-rotation or key-compromise plan Slide 16 OASIS Idtrust Member Section Identity and Trusted infrastructure components Identity & Trust Policies; Enforcement, Education and Outreach Identify barriers and emerging issues Current Technical Committees – Enterprise Key Management Infrastructure TC – Public Key Infrastructure Adoption TC – Digital Signature Services TC Slide 17 OASIS EKMI TC Four (4) objectives & Sub-Committees: – Standardize on Symmetric Key Services Markup Language (SKSML) – Create Implementation & Operations Guidelines – Create Audit Guidelines – Create Interoperability Test-Suite Slide 18 Burton Group on EKMI "The life cycle of encryption keys is incredibly important. As enterprises deploy ever-increasing numbers of encryption solutions, they often find themselves managing silos with inconsistent policies, availability, and strength of protection. Enterprises need to maintain keys in a consistent way across various applications and business units," said Trent Henry, senior analyst, Burton Group. "EKMI will be an important step in addressing this problem in an open, cross-vendor manner." Slide 19 Current EKMI TC Members FundServ (Canada) MISMO (USA) NuParadigm Government Systems, Inc. (USA) PA Consulting (UK) PrimeKey (Sweden) Red Hat (USA) StrongAuth (USA) US Department of Defense (USA) Visa International (USA) Wave Systems (USA) Wells Fargo (USA) Many security and audit focused individuals Slide 20 Current EKMI TC Observers 3 Global Security Companies (Canada, US) Global Software Company (US) Global Database Company (US) 2 Large Consulting Companies (US) Government Agency (New Zealand) Slide 21 ISACA & OASIS Many ISACA members from San Francisco are EKMI TC (AGSC) members Planning underway for a full-day workshop in October-November 2007 in SFO – Setting up an SKMS – Operating an SKMS – Auditing an SKMS – Attacking an SKMS Potential for many ISACA workshops Slide 22 Conclusion “Securing the Core” should have been Plan-A from the beginning; but its not too late to remediate OASIS EKMI TC is driving new standards in key-management that cuts across platforms, applications and industries Building, securing and auditing EKMI requires new levels of knowledge and understanding Get involved! Slide 23 EKMI Resources www.oasis-open.org Policy template, Use Cases, SKSML Schema, Presentations, White Papers, Implementation Guidelines, etc. www.strongkey.org - Open-source SKMSwww.strongkey.org www.issa.org - Article on SKMS in February 2007 issuewww.issa.org