Technology Review - Published By MIT
Log in to My.TechnologyReview.com | Register
Advertisement
 

A commonsense take on computer security, usability and why IT does matter.

View Complete Bio
Add RSS Feed XML

What Makes MIT's Network Tick?

Recommended: NetworkWorld's interview with Jeff Schiller.
Tuesday, January 23, 2007

NetworkWorld's website has just put up an eight-page interview with Jeff Schiller, MIT's network manager and security architect. The interview is unusually candid, even for Jeff, and he talks about MIT's plans for deploying voice over Internet protocol (VoIP), the university’s optical network and 10 gigabit-per-second connection to Internet 2, and how MIT has managed to avoid being front-page news with one of those data breaches.

Probably the most telling part of the interview is when Jeff explains his approach to VoIP security. MIT is being forced to adopt VoIP because its hugely expensive 5ESS is going to be discontinued pretty soon. Rather than buying yet another ISDN switch, MIT is slowly rolling out Polycom VoIP phones, high-end Cisco VoIP switches for interconnect, and Open source Asterisk internally for things like voice mail.

The problem here, unfortunately, is that the VoIP vendors have done a lousy job with security. The phones are all configured by accessing their built-in Web servers; every phone has the same password; and none of them support encryption.

I know that Jeff generally doesn't like firewalls because they encourage lax internal security and because they can be circumvented.

But this time he really doesn't have a choice because the vendors have failed to implement anything reasonable. So rather than trying to rationally manage this nightmare or convince the vendors to get their act together, Jeff is basically calling "uncle" and putting the whole mess on its own virtual LAN (a VLAN), so that the bad guys won't be able to reach it.

My favorite quote from the article:

"VoIP security in general has been a real disaster. Like everyone who does technology, the VoIP vendors don’t want to think of security when they’re designing, and they aren’t convinced the bad guys are really out there just because they’re not attacking yet (and of course they won’t attack until you have 100 million handsets out there to make it worth their while). The other problem with VoIP is that there have been a lot of Bellheads involved and they have a security model that’s completely whacked--the “trust the network” model. In the Internet space you don’t trust anybody, particularly the network. You better do end-to-end security if you care."

But don't take my word for it: read the whole thing.

Tags: VoIP, MIT

Comments

Video

A Messy Art Katrina S. Firlik, a neurosurgeon in Greenwich, CT, talks about using technology in neurosurgery.
The Next Bubble Home Tweet Home Who Owns Your Friends? Brain Games Sequencing a Single Molecule of DNA
The Next Bubble
Home Tweet Home
Who Owns Your Friends?
Brain Games
Sequencing a Single Molecule of DNA
 
 
The Next Bubble
Advertisement

Current Issue

Technology Review July/August 2008
The Business of Social Networks
The future of the Web is social. But can social-networking sites ever make money?
•  Subscribe
Save 41%
•  Table of Contents
•  MIT News

Magazine Services

Career Resources

MIT Technology Insider

Stories and breaking news from inside MIT about the latest research, innovations, and startups--in a convenient monthly e-newsletter. Subscribe today
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology