Firewall Father Wants WikiLeaks Prosecuted

WikiLeaks’ head, Julian Assange should be prosecuted for putting lives at risk, and cyber-threats are dangerous because of the very democracy of the Internet, says Bill “Ches” Cheswick, the AT&T technical lead who is widely credited as the father of the firewall.

Cheswick has a lot of security opinions to share with eWEEK Europe, on a visit to London, but we need to sort out the paternity issue first. “Am I the father of the firewall?” he says. “There are probably about ten fathers of the firewall,”

This may be false modesty. If you check the Wikipedia entry on firewalls, his name comes first. He co-wrote (with Steven Bellovin) the first book on the subject in 1990 (Repelling the Wily Hacker), and coined the term “proxy”.

He remains a lead member of technical staff at AT&T, the former owner of Bell Labs, where he and Bellovin worked in the late 1980s to develop practical systems to keep malicious network activity out of connected systems.

Firewalls have become a standard

With “ten fathers” it means firewalls were inevitable: “if any one of us had been hit by a bus, we would still have firewalls today.” Luckily, Cheswick wasn’t hit by a bus, and is around for us to talk to.

And certainly his early firewall years were exciting ones: “I was running the Bell Labs firewall in 1988 when the Morris Worm came out, and that did not get us,” he says. As the first malware to replicate on the Internet, the Morris worm raised the profile of Internet security, resulting in the formation of CERTs and more widespread use of firewalls.

Since then, firewalls have become a standard commodity, available as free software, and efforts to increase their mystique with new terms such as “application layer” or “Intrusion Prevention Systems”, are mostly marketing hype, Cheswick believes.

“We did deep packet inspection in 1987,” he says. “We just didn’t call it that.”

And he was never convinced the firewall was the all-powerful solution it was marketed as, since insider threats and the physical perimeter are just as important: “I consider the firewall to be middling level security at best.”

Cyberwar – attacks anyone can make

Looking at today’s security landscape, he is interested to see the apparent confirmation, with Stuxnet, that government agencies are involved in making malware, but “It is not a surprise,” he says.

He doesn’t like the term cyberwar.  “I think the word is wrong, because in some sense it is war but it is fury and sound signifiying little,” he says. “It is just espionage.”

He does concede that DDoS attacks can be destructive and politically motivated, and spotted some early ones.

“In 1999, I was doing the Internet Mapping Project at Bell Labs,” he said “I watched Serbia during the bombing in May of that year, and it just went away from the Internet. I realised we needed a foreign policy, and that’s normally reserved for government, not people in their pyjamas.”

In fact, the Internet can be a dangerous weapon, which is “really the first state of the art technology that is so democratic that anyone can do it.” Ordinary citizens can’t get the materials to build an atom bomb, he says – although Cheswick himself has downloaded several chapters of the US bomb-making primer, written at Los Alamos, which eventually leaked out of a Russian KGB site – “but I can build software that will attack the hell out of some country.”

As an aside, he says he is concerned that germ warfare might become equally democratic, as new techniques are bringing down the cost of genetic manipulation.

WikiLeaks should stand trial

Governments can learn from WikiLeaks, but he believes the whistleblowing site was wrong: “I suspect that people have died and I would support criminal action against WikiLeaks,” he says. “My big concern is that leaks like this are inherentlty anonymous, and if you are going to publish this sort of thing, you have people’s lives in your hand.”

But what can governments learn from Wikileaks? Keep data separated, with bulkheads: “As I understand it from State Department network information, the State Department is no longer on SIPRnet,” says Cheswick.

Continued on page 2

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Peter Judge

Peter Judge has been involved with tech B2B publishing in the UK for many years, working at Ziff-Davis, ZDNet, IDG and Reed. His main interests are networking security, mobility and cloud

View Comments

  • What a jackass. Going after Assange is actually a threat to the very thing which the government purports to be protecting: freedom. Freedom of speech and ideas.

    Apart from which.... no-one should fear truth.

    FYI, all the Wikileaks videos are on this hub:
    http://wikileaks.videohq.tv

  • “In 1999, I was doing the Internet Mapping Project at Bell Labs,” he said “I watched Serbia during the bombing in May of that year, and it just went away from the Internet. I realised we needed a foreign policy, and that’s normally reserved for government, not people in their pyjamas.”

    If it wasn't for Wikileaks, there wouldn't be any justice for Serbia at all! It was those cables that were released which showed an unjustified bombing campaign against regular citizens who were in fact just sitting around in their pyjamas! The goverment has hidden agendas, simple as that. If the people only rely on their TV for news, then they're only being told half the story and usually what their government wants them to hear.

  • Cheswick must have a hidden agenda. he obviously prefers dark secrets to remain dark. No one in their right mind condones the sort of treatment the US government on the one hand profests to defend people from torture and on the other hand dishes it out.

    Yes, he is a spokesperson for the great US government.

  • Gosh, I forgot to pick up my government spokesperson check.

    The article doesn't cover my more extensive discussion of Wikileaks, but the excerpt is accurate as far as it goes. If some poor informant (perhaps in his pyjamas) gets killed in retaliation in Pakistan, then yes, Assange deserves some of the blame and should face trial as an accessory to murder.

    On the other hand, the leaks showed that a fair percentage of classified data shouldn't be classified, and probably remains so for CYA purposes.

    Actually, the US diplomats looked pretty good in the leaks: they had informed, nuanced take on things.

  • Thanks for expanding that, Bill.

    I hope the article is fair. We ended up giving prominence to your asides about WikiLeaks, on the assumption that more people would click to read them.

    I'm sure anyone who reads it will spot your real message, and sign up to the campaign for simple passwords...

    Peter Judge

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