[CODE4LIB] SEC4LIB or Hack, Crack, and Frakk breakout sessions

2012-04-20 Thread Erin Germ
At IUG I talked to a few people about security of library services and
applications. Becky had mentioned doing a breakout session to discuss
security at the next IUG or conference.

Would anyone be interested in helping plan a breakout session and
discussing security of library services and application? A recent
presentation lead me to believe it would also be of great value to have a
set of good practices that are very accessible to those who do not have a
security, or even IT, background.

Or would anyone be interested in forming an informal SEC4LIB discussion
group. This would be an informal group to discuss existing security
features and shortcomings of library services and applications. Ideally
this would include a blend of high and low level skills and knowledge.

I am personally interested in documenting known and patched vulnerabilities
of current and past library software and services.


Re: [CODE4LIB] SEC4LIB or Hack, Crack, and Frakk breakout sessions

2012-04-20 Thread Al Matthews
On this issue, the following paper may be of interest. It contemplates an 
orderly trade in exploits:

http://securityevaluators.com/files/papers/0daymarket.pdf .

Thank you,

Al Matthews, Software Dev,
Atlanta University Center

From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Peter Murray 
[peter.mur...@lyrasis.org]
Sent: Friday, April 20, 2012 1:47 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] SEC4LIB or Hack, Crack, and Frakk breakout sessions

I remember the related discussion from last month 
(http://serials.infomotions.com/code4lib/archive/2012/201203/thread.html#777) 
-- and kudos for bringing it up again -- and I find I'm still of mixed feelings 
about it.  Security is an important aspect of software development, no 
argument, but I wonder if there is something separate or distinct for libraries 
about the topic.  What I do wonder about, though, is if there is a role for a 
generic-to-libraries security incident response team that would responsibly 
take in reports of security problems, work with vendors and/or software 
developers, and publish outcomes.  I could see a need for such a team that was 
respected in our field and had contacts with people from the vendor community 
and FOSS projects.


Peter

On Apr 20, 2012, at 12:35 PM, Erin Germ wrote:
 At IUG I talked to a few people about security of library services and
 applications. Becky had mentioned doing a breakout session to discuss
 security at the next IUG or conference.

 Would anyone be interested in helping plan a breakout session and
 discussing security of library services and application? A recent
 presentation lead me to believe it would also be of great value to have a
 set of good practices that are very accessible to those who do not have a
 security, or even IT, background.

 Or would anyone be interested in forming an informal SEC4LIB discussion
 group. This would be an informal group to discuss existing security
 features and shortcomings of library services and applications. Ideally
 this would include a blend of high and low level skills and knowledge.

 I am personally interested in documenting known and patched vulnerabilities
 of current and past library software and services.



--
Peter Murray
Assistant Director, Technology Services Development
LYRASIS
peter.mur...@lyrasis.org
+1 678-235-2955

1438 West Peachtree Street NW
Suite 200
Atlanta, GA 30309
Toll Free: 800.999.8558
Fax: 404.892.7879
www.lyrasis.org

LYRASIS: Great Libraries. Strong Communities. Innovative Answers.
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Re: [CODE4LIB] SEC4LIB or Hack, Crack, and Frakk breakout sessions

2012-04-20 Thread Erin Germ
Thank you for the link Al.

My personal interest is not for that. It's for working with vendors to
harden their services and applications, and seeing common trends.

On Fri, Apr 20, 2012 at 2:03 PM, Al Matthews amatth...@auctr.edu wrote:

 On this issue, the following paper may be of interest. It contemplates an
 orderly trade in exploits:

 http://securityevaluators.com/files/papers/0daymarket.pdf .

 Thank you,

 Al Matthews, Software Dev,
 Atlanta University Center
 
 From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Peter
 Murray [peter.mur...@lyrasis.org]
 Sent: Friday, April 20, 2012 1:47 PM
 To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
 Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] SEC4LIB or Hack, Crack, and Frakk breakout
 sessions

 I remember the related discussion from last month (
 http://serials.infomotions.com/code4lib/archive/2012/201203/thread.html#777)
 -- and kudos for bringing it up again -- and I find I'm still of mixed
 feelings about it.  Security is an important aspect of software
 development, no argument, but I wonder if there is something separate or
 distinct for libraries about the topic.  What I do wonder about, though, is
 if there is a role for a generic-to-libraries security incident response
 team that would responsibly take in reports of security problems, work with
 vendors and/or software developers, and publish outcomes.  I could see a
 need for such a team that was respected in our field and had contacts with
 people from the vendor community and FOSS projects.


 Peter

 On Apr 20, 2012, at 12:35 PM, Erin Germ wrote:
  At IUG I talked to a few people about security of library services and
  applications. Becky had mentioned doing a breakout session to discuss
  security at the next IUG or conference.
 
  Would anyone be interested in helping plan a breakout session and
  discussing security of library services and application? A recent
  presentation lead me to believe it would also be of great value to have a
  set of good practices that are very accessible to those who do not have a
  security, or even IT, background.
 
  Or would anyone be interested in forming an informal SEC4LIB discussion
  group. This would be an informal group to discuss existing security
  features and shortcomings of library services and applications. Ideally
  this would include a blend of high and low level skills and knowledge.
 
  I am personally interested in documenting known and patched
 vulnerabilities
  of current and past library software and services.



 --
 Peter Murray
 Assistant Director, Technology Services Development
 LYRASIS
 peter.mur...@lyrasis.org
 +1 678-235-2955

 1438 West Peachtree Street NW
 Suite 200
 Atlanta, GA 30309
 Toll Free: 800.999.8558
 Fax: 404.892.7879
 www.lyrasis.org

 LYRASIS: Great Libraries. Strong Communities. Innovative Answers.
 -

 **
 The contents of this email and any attachments are confidential.
 They are intended for the named recipient(s) only.
 If you have received this email in error please notify the system
 manager or  the
 sender immediately and do not disclose the contents to anyone or
 make copies.

 ** IronMail scanned this email for viruses, vandals and malicious
 content. **

 **