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Zero Day

Ryan Naraine and Dancho Danchev

Barbers and security professionals

By | September 2, 2010, 2:24pm PDT

Summary: In this guest editorial, security research professional Michal Zalewski argues that the government should stay away from compulsory certification and licensing in the security industry.

Guest editorial by Michal Zalewski
There seems to be a significant, government-sponsored push for compulsory certification and licensing in the security industry. The wonderfully self-contradictory report from the Commission on Cybersecurity [.pdf] aside, Larry Seltzer pointed out that this very idea is also a major part of the proposed Cybersecurity Act of 2009:

“Beginning 3 years after the date of enactment of this Act, it shall be unlawful for any individual to engage in business in the United States, or to be employed in the United States, as a provider of cybersecurity services to any [...] information system or network designated by the President, or the President’s designee, as a critical infrastructure information system or network, who is not licensed and certified under the program.”

I agree that there are persuasive arguments to be made in favor of taking this step - but it is very important to recognize that the same arguments can easily be made in favor of mandatory licensing for almost any contemporary profession. Quite simply: in modern societies, people serving even the most mundane roles can and occasionally do cause profound losses or significant distress to others. C’est la vie.

There is a small subset of professions where the stakes are particularly high - for example, building engineers; and several classes of occupations endowed with unique social privileges or an unusual degree of trust - say, doctors, lawyers, or teachers. In all these cases, licensing probably makes sense - although quite literally, it comes at a very significant price.

[ ALSO SEE: Postcards from the anti-virus world ]

In most other occupations, however, the situation is far less obvious - and the current regulatory practice is rather arbitrary. We usually license barbers and hot-dog vendors - but not bakers, farmers, or pacemaker assembly line workers. Electricians and plumbers are licensed - but construction workers do not need to demonstrate even basic competency to any external body. Many of these distinctions are driven by specific interest groups, some are fueled by moral panics; but they do not seem to form a coherent, cost-efficient plan to make our society a safer place.

The extra cost of licensing aside, the most significant pitfall of overzealous regulation is that in attempts to preemptively police complex industries or individual human behaviors, governments are necessarily clumsy and heavy-handed - and often fail to consider many of the socially valuable corner cases. Here’s a couple of my favorite (if only vaguely related) non-IT anecdotes:

  • To combat the proliferation of basement meth labs, Texas requires a license and a home inspection to buy a beaker. While this is unlikely to have any impact on real criminal activity, teaching your children chemistry suddenly gets a lot more complicated.
  • In an attempt to curtail drug use, eleven US states require you to have a prescription to buy syringes. This has a significant impact on many types of precision hobbies, where syringes are indispensable as a measuring tool; and probably only promotes syringe reuse among drug addicts.
  • Following reports of people pointing lasers at aircrafts, Australia and some other jurisdictions ban sale or import of lasers with output over 1 mW. This rule also covers more powerful but completely eye-safe lasers with integral pattern-generating optics - commonly used in machine vision and hobbyist robotics; the impact on these applications is profound.

In the end, it is a natural human instinct to try and minimize many of the perceived risks we are subjected to - but it’s also important to seek sensible balance between this goal, and the task of maintaining our civil liberties, or enabling scientific progress. We can make our lives resemble one giant TSA checkpoint - but it’s not a cheering prospect to contemplate.  So, yup: it is clear that bad software engineering may lead to real damage, and that the current situation is far from being perfect. There is also a potential for damage in getting a bad haircut, or being served a mystery hot-dog. In the end, however, I believe that in absence of truly exceptional circumstances and profound social benefits, we should be giving people the right to choose - and leave it to the industry to come up with the sort of meaningful professional certifications that it actually needs (if it needs any). Rudimentary liability for negligent engineering may be a far better method of improving status quo, by creating incentives to care about security - rather than having a certification system to hide behind.

Some of the urgency around this topic is fueled today by the end-times rhetoric about cyber-terrorism, cyber-warfare, and the imminent cyber-apocalypse - and the apparent shortage of qualified personnel to step up and save the day; but for most part, I do think this idea is very misguided. The landscape of information security, and the economics of vulnerability exploitation, have not fundamentally changed in the past 6-8 years or so - spare for a body of vivid anecdotes, and a couple of interesting but not surprising incidents; we also enjoyed a steady growth of a competent workforce, and a very self-limiting problem of charlatans. It is still the bored teenagers and the crazy geeks, and not the XSS-obsessed arm of Al Qaeda, that are the most significant threat to our infrastructure. True, government agencies are finding it unexpectedly difficult to hire the right talent, but some of the reasons for this may lie with the organizational challenges these entities are facing today - and not with the failings of the outside world.

Even if you disagree with the vaguely libertarian premise outlined earlier - that governments should not regulate professions in absence of exceptional social benefits of doing so - the other important question is whether there exists a body of stable, scientific knowledge that could be enforced as a part of a professional licensing scheme; if not, then the entire philosophical argument is moot. The apparent failure of commercial certifications systems - a fact confusingly pointed out and then subsequently completely ignored in the CSIS report - may offer an important clue: are the existing schemes inadequate and weakly embraced simply because people who administer them are incompetent quacks? If not, then perhaps, something more profound is amiss - and a new, shiny licensing scheme is not going to change that.

* Michal Zalewski is a security research professional. He has written and released many security tools, including ratproxy, skipfish and the browser security handbook.  He can be found at the lcamtuf’s blog and on Twitter.

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Topics

Ryan Naraine is a journalist and social media enthusiast specializing in Internet and computer security issues.

Disclosure

Ryan Naraine

The most important disclosure is of my employment with Kaspersky Lab as a security evangelist. Kaspersky Lab is a global company specializing in anti-malware and secure content management technologies. I do not own stocks or other investments in any technology company.

Biography

Ryan Naraine

Ryan Naraine is a journalist and social media enthusiast specializing in Internet and computer security issues. He is currently security evangelist at Kaspersky Lab, an anti-malware company with operations around the globe. He is taking a leadership role in developing the company's online community initiative around secure content management technologies.

Prior to joining Kaspersky Lab, Ryan was Editor-at-Large/Security at eWEEK, leading the magazine's and Web site's coverage of Internet and computer security issues and managing the popular SecurityWatch blog, covering the daily threats, vulnerabilities and IT security technologies. He also covered IT security, hacker attacks and secure content management topics for Jupiter Media's internetnetnews.com.

Ryan can be reached at naraine SHIFT 2 gmail.com. For daily updates on Ryan's activities, follow him on Twitter.

Talkback Most Recent of 16 Talkback(s)

  • licensing is good
    your barber is licensed for health reasons, just so you know many states now require a contractors license, and some very expensive insurance. Perhaps you should have to insure yourself if you're a security expert, and that would be enough to mitigate any damage you may cause.I have to tell you that the insurance would probably cost tens of thousands of dollars a year.

    Regulation is good for the consumer, and when it comes to cyber security, it's a good idea to not let a scammer pass of his malware as a security program, and if he tried to, at least you would have his home address as a place to start the criminal investigation.

    perhaps bonding would be another way, with a criminal background check and some other means of verifying your identity and address. Let's face it, it's ugly out there.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    sparkle farkle
    4th Sep 2010
  • RE: Barbers and security professionals
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    gogon gondrong
    21st Jul
  • Licensing usually devolves into just another tax mechanism
    Licensing should be used sparingly and only when there is a compelling argument for public safety. The reality is that more often than not, licensing usually devolves into just another tax and competition prevention mechanism. (There are jurisdictions that regulate such "vital" services as interior decorating and flower arranging)
    ZDNet Gravatar
    JohnMcGrew@...
    3rd Sep 2010
  • Dead on
    @JohnMcGrew

    There's insight in these words.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    klumper
    4th Sep 2010
  • RE: Barbers and security professionals
    If you have any money left after you paid your income taxes in whatever form they are disguised, the government wants it and will fabricate the scenario to justify their theft your money.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    inkwell
    3rd Sep 2010
  • Dead on x2
    @inkwell

    But more insight.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    klumper
    4th Sep 2010
  • RE: Barbers and security professionals
    The UK tried this through the Private Security Industry Act 2001. The regulating authority (www.sia.homeoffice.gov.uk) has put the licensing of security consultants on hold as they could not come up with an agreed definition of what that term covered. They could also not articulate clearly the threat licensing of security consultants was meant to address. I await with interest to see how the US addresses this definitional problem.
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    4th Sep 2010
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    1st Jul
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    10th Sep
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    11th Sep
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    13th Sep
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    13th Sep
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    25th Sep
  • RE: Barbers and security professionals
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    MEJIAHA
    30th Sep

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