CISA’s “Secure by Design, Secure by Default” gets it right

I was recently at Black Hat and DefCon in Las Vegas and was excited to reconnect with Dr. Allan Friedman from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). Among the many cyber issues being addressed by CISA today, it was reassuring to hear that their “Secure by Design, Secure by Default” initiative is gaining traction.

I have been testing cybersecurity products since 2007 – first at NSS Labs, and now at CyberRatings.org – and continue to be surprised when some vendors ship products to customers without including a secure configuration as a default baseline.

Research indicates that most customers expect cybersecurity vendors to ship with a high level of protection enabled by default. CISA’s publication states the following:¹

“Secure-by-Default” means products are resilient against prevalent exploitation techniques out of the box without additional charge. These products protect against the most prevalent threats and vulnerabilities without end-users having to take additional steps to secure them. Secure-by-Default products are designed to make customers acutely aware that when they deviate from safe defaults, they are increasing the likelihood of compromise unless they implement additional compensating controls.

A secure configuration should be the default baseline. Secure-by-Default products automatically enable the most important security controls needed to protect enterprises from malicious cyber actors, as well as provide the ability to use and further configure security controls at no additional cost.

The complexity of security configuration should not be a customer problem. Organizational IT staff are frequently overloaded with security and operational responsibilities, thus resulting in limited time to understand and implement the security implications and mitigations required for a robust cybersecurity posture. Through optimizing secure product configuration—securing the “default path”— manufacturers can aid their customers by ensuring their products are manufactured, distributed, and used securely in accordance with “Secure-by-Default” standards.

Manufacturers of products that are “Secure-by-Default” do not charge extra for implementing additional security configurations. Instead, they include them in the base product like seatbelts are included in all new cars. Security is not a luxury option but is closer to the standard every customer should expect without negotiating or paying more.²

CyberRatings.org has been and will continue to test every product with the vendor default (pre-defined recommended) policies and configurations. In addition, there will be a requirement that the security products have all options for evasion defenses enabled by default in the shipped product. We continue this tradition with our upcoming test of Cloud Network Firewalls. Our latest methodology was released today.

We are glad that we are in alignment with CISA and look forward to expanding our efforts to support their “Secure by Design, Secure by Default” initiative.

Vikram Phatak

CEO, CyberRatings.org

¹ https://www.cisa.gov/resources-tools/resources/secure-by-design-and-default

² https://www.cisa.gov/sites/default/files/2023-06/principles_approaches_for_security-by-design-default_508c.pdf

Cloud Network Firewall (CNFW) Test Update

Today we published our test report of Forcepoint’s Cloud Network Firewall (CNFW). This follows last month’s publication of Fortinet’s Cloud Network Firewall at the RSA Conference in San Francisco. These are the first two publications from the Cloud Network Firewall group test. Testing covered Management & Reporting Capabilities, Routing and Policy Enforcement, SSL/TLS Functionality, Threat Prevention and Performance. Amazon Web Services (AWS) was the cloud provider.

We have been asked who else is in the test, and we want to let everyone know there is more coming!! We expect several more products to be added to the test before we publish our comparative report in a few months. The next reports to be published will be Juniper and Versa, which are currently being tested. I don’t mean to be coy about the specifics of when and who all will be published; this is a new test and like anything new, testing the first few products takes time. We ask everyone to bear with us while we go through these growing pains.

As a reminder, we ask that you please tell us which technologies and vendors you would like to see us test. The easiest way is to email us at [email protected].

Thank you,
Vikram Phatak
CEO