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All intranets are vulnerable to attack. Their
underlying TCP/IP architecture is identical to
that of the Internet. Since the Internet was
built for maximum openness and communication,
there are countless techniques that can be used
to attack intranets. Attacks can involve the
theft of vital company information and even
cash. Attacks can destroy or deny a company's
computing resources and services. Attackers can
break in or pose as a company employee to use
the company's intranet resources.
Firewalls
are hardware and software combinations that
block intruders from access to an intranet while
still allowing people on the intranet to access
the resources of the Internet. Depending on how
secure a site needs to be, and on how much time,
money, and resources can be spent on a firewall,
there are many kinds that can be built. Most of
them, though, are built using only a few
elements. Servers and routers are the primary
components of firewalls.
Most firewalls use some kind
of packet filtering. In packet filtering,
a screening router or filtering router
looks at every packet of data traveling between
an intranet and the Internet.
Proxy servers
on an intranet are used when someone from the
intranet wants to access a server on the
Internet. A request from the user's computer is
sent to the proxy server instead of directly to
the Internet. The proxy server contacts the
server on the Internet, receives the information
from the Internet, and then sends the
information to the requester on the intranet. By
acting as a go-between like this, proxy servers
can filter traffic and maintain security as well
as log all traffic between the Internet and the
network.
Bastion hosts
are heavily fortified servers that handle all
incoming requests from the Internet, such as FTP
requests. A single bastion host handling
incoming requests makes it easier to maintain
security and track attacks. In the event of a
break in, only that single host has been
compromised, instead of the entire network. In
some firewalls, multiple bastion hosts can be
used, one for each different kind of intranet
service request.
Firewalls protect intranets
from any attacks launched against them from the
Internet. They are designed to protect an
intranet from unauthorized access to corporate
information, and damaging or denying computer
resources and services. They are also designed
to stop people on the intranet from accessing
Internet services that can be dangerous, such as
FTP.
- Intranet computers are
allowed access to the Internet only after
passing through a firewall. Requests have to
pass through an internal screening router,
also called an internal filtering routeror
choke router. This router prevents
packet traffic from being sniffed remotely. A
choke router examines all pack-ets for
information such as the source and destination
of the packet.1
- The router compares the
information it finds to rules in a
filtering table, and passes or drops the
packets based on those rules. For example,
some services, such as rlogin, may not be
allowed to run. The router also might not
allow any packets to be sent to specific
suspicious Internet locations. A router can
also block every packet traveling between the
Internet and the internal network, except for
e-mail. System administrators set the rules
for determining which packets to allow in and
which to block.
- When an intranet is
protected by a firewall, the usual internal
intranet services are available-such as
e-mail, access to corporate databases and Web
services, and the use of groupware.
- Screened subnet firewalls
have one more way to protect the intranet-an
exterior screening router, also called
an exterior filtering router or an
access router. This router screens packets
between the Internet and the perimeter network
using the same kind of technology that the
interior screening router uses. It can screen
packets based on the same rules that apply to
the internal screening router and can protect
the network even if the internal router fails.
It also, however, may have additional rules
for screening packets specifically designed to
protect the bastion host.
- As a way to further protect
an intranet from attack, the bastion host is
placed in a perimeter network-a
subnet-inside the firewall. If the bastion
host was on the intranet instead of a
perimeter network and was broken into, the
intruder could gain access to the intranet.
- A bastion host is the main
point of contact for connections coming in
from the Internet for all services such as
e-mail, FTP access, and any other data and
requests. The bastion host services all those
requests-people on the intranet contact only
this one server, and they don't directly
contact any other intranet servers.
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