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Saturday | 22 November, 2008
CIO
Franken Patch
The current manufacturing process for patches - from disclosure of a vulnerability to the creation and distribution of the updated code - makes patching untenable. At the same time, the only way to fix insecure post-release software (in other words, all software) is with patches.
Scott Berinato 09 December, 2003 12:18:01

Why Every Patch Starts from Zero

As the volume and complexity of software increases, so do the volume and complexity of patches. The problem with this, says SEI's Hernan, is that there's nothing standard about the patch infrastructure or managing the onslaught of patches.

There are no standard naming conventions for patches; vulnerability disclosure comes from whatever competitive vendor can get the news out first. Distribution might be automated or manual; and installation could be a double-click .exe file or a manual process.

Microsoft alone uses a hierarchy of eight different patching mechanisms (the company says it wants to reduce that number). But that only adds to more customer confusion.

"How do I know when I need to reapply a security rollup patch? Do I then need to reapply Win2K Service Pack 2? Do I need to reinstall hot fixes after more recent SPs?" Similar questions were posed to a third-party services company in a security newsletter. The answer was a page-and-a-half long.

There's also little record-keeping or archiving around patches, leaving vendors to make the same mistakes over and over without building up knowledge about when and where vulnerabilities arise and how to avoid them. For example, Apple's Safari Web browser contained a significant security flaw in the way it validated certificates using SSL encryption, which required a patch. Every browser ever built before Safari, Hernan says, had contained the same flaw.

"I'd like to think there's a way to improve the process here," says Mykolas Rambus, CIO of financial services company WP Carey. "It would take an industry body - a non-profit consortium-type set-up - to create standard naming conventions, to production test an insane number of these things, and to keep a database of knowledge on the patches so I could look up what other companies like mine did with their patching and what happened."

Rambus doesn't sound hopeful.

Slammer Dopeslaps the Software Industry

Slammer has become something of a turning point. The fury of its 10-minute conflagration and the ensuing comedy of a gaggle of fire-fighters untangling their hoses, rushing to the scene and finding that the building has already burnt down, left enough of an impression to convince many that patching, as it is currently practised, doesn't work.

"Something has to happen," says Rambus. "There's going to be a backlash if it doesn't improve. I'd suggest that this patching problem is the responsibility of the vendors, and the costs are being taken on by the customers."

There's good news and bad news for Rambus. The good news is that vendors are motivated to try and fix the patch process. And they're earnest - one might say even religious - about their competing approaches. And the fervent search for a cure has intensified markedly since Slammer.

The bad news is that none of what's happening changes the economics of patching. Customers still pay.

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