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2 Ways to Prevent Rogue Devices from Stealing Your Data

These products promise to secure your systems' many entry points
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Many years ago, users’ only access to company data occurred through dumb terminals to a mainframe. The data resided safely in the data center, and the only way it might physically leave that data center was on reel-to-reel tape or large, heavy hard drives. By contrast, today’s users have multiple access points to company data—for example, USB drives, floppy drives, and even burnable CD/DVD drives. Dishonest employees can easily use these points of access to steal sensitive data. If you’ve considered blasting your users’ USB ports with hot glue, you aren’t alone. But perhaps there’s a more elegant solution available to you.

The two products I investigate in this comparative review—Smart- Line’s DeviceLock and ControlGuard’s Endpoint Access Manager—can help you take back control of all those vulnerable access points. I’ve focused on only two representative products here, but keep in mind that other options are available, including functionality that Microsoft introduced in Windows XP SP2—see the sidebar “A Snapshot of the Endpoint Security Market,” for more information.

Smartline DeviceLock
Summary of SmartLine DeviceLock DeviceLock Security’s installation starts with the execution of a typical setup.exe file. However, I found the installation a bit confusing. The installation wizard has two main options to choose from: Use the Service + Consoles option to install the DeviceLock service and management consoles, or use the Server + Consoles option to install the server component and the consoles. At first, these options look the same, but as you can see, one is the DeviceLock service and the other is the server product. The first option is selected by default, leading to my confusion.

According to the DeviceLock Manual PDF guide, the “DeviceLock Service should be installed on the computer so you can control the access to devices on that computer.” Is the DeviceLock Service required on the management server? I called the company to ask for clarification. A friendly technician explained that the service is necessary only if you want to protect USB and other endpoints on the server. Otherwise, you can skip the service installation on the server and deploy it just to the user’s PC. I find it a bit odd that the service is selected by default, but apparently it’s provided as a convenience.

There’s also a Custom option. I used this method to install the service and the server. The optional DeviceLock Enterprise Server component—which requires a SQL Server back end—allows for the centralized collection and storage of shadow data and audit logs. If you have a SQL Server infrastructure, ControlGuard recommends that you use that. If you don’t have SQL Server available, the PDF manual provides a direct link for downloading SQL Server 2005 Express.

After the installation was complete, I was presented with three separate consoles on the desktop: DeviceLock Management Console (a Microsoft Management Console—MMC— snap-in), DeviceLock Service Settings Editor (similar to the new tools that DeviceLock adds to Group Policy), and DeviceLock Enterprise Manager (recommended if you have a large network without Active Directory—AD). These consoles were a bit overwhelming, combined with the product’s promise of Group Policy integration.

To keep things initially simple, I started with DeviceLock Enterprise Manager and remotely installed the DeviceLock Service onto my test XP machine. As I expected, the service wasn’t able to install because the XP SP2 firewall was blocking it. The DeviceLock Manual provides detailed instructions for either opening the XP firewall with the necessary ports or setting a specific port for all DeviceLock communication. I used Group Policy to configure the XP firewall, and I was able to install the service remotely.

The DeviceLock Service is also available in an MSI format, so you can install it through Group Policy or SMS. I highly recommend a structured AD with hierarchal organizational units (OUs), in which users and computers are taken out of the default containers. This setup helps you organize and find user and computer leaf objects, and makes Group Policy deployment much easier.. I would place a policy at the highest All Computers OU, then deploy the DeviceLock Service from there. There isn’t a built-in automated method to deploy the client agent (as the ControlGuard product offers), so I had to set up my own way to ensure that all desktops had the DeviceLock agent installed as soon as they were added to the domain. To do this, I applied a Group Policy to an OU containing all the users’ computers. Now, every time I add a computer to the domain, the client software is installed automatically. Figure 1 shows Device- Lock’s smooth integration with your existing GPOs.

After I verified that the DeviceLock agent was running (it runs as a typical NT service), I used DeviceLock Enterprise Manager to deploy my first policy. This simple process lets you select specific AD users or groups, the date and time those users or groups are permitted to access the device, and even the specific user rights (i.e., Read, Write, Format, Eject) allowed for each device. You can secure not only USB ports but also Bluetooth ports, CD/DVD drives, FireWire ports, floppy drives, hard disks, infrared (IR) ports, parallel ports, removable devices, serial ports, tape drives, Wi-Fi access points (APs), and Windows Mobile devices. When you think of points of access, USB is probably the first type that comes to mind, but data can be compromised from many entry points. For a listing of endpoints that DeviceLock protects, see Table 1.

As soon as I attempted to access a USB device on the XP client, a dialog box immediately informed me that access was denied. I tried to find a way around the policy but was thwarted at every attempt. I even tried to stop the DeviceLock service, but the Stop button was disabled.

Integrating DeviceLock management with Group Policy is a brilliant idea. After using DeviceLock Enterprise Manager to play around with policies, I decided to deploy a policy using a Group Policy Object (GPO). Opening a new GPO brings up a new addition called SmartLline DeviceLock—not a simple administrative (ADM) template but a fully functional GUI that looks and feels just like the aforementioned DeviceLock Service Settings Editor. Using this screen, I was able to deploy endpoint security settings to users’ computers just as I had done through DeviceLock Enterprise Manager. If you already have structured AD and Group Policy management procedures in place, I highly recommend that you use this method to deploy the settings.

As you apply policies to secure endpoints, it can quickly become difficult to determine a given PC’s actual settings. Because DeviceLock is heavily integrated with AD and Group Policy, it can take advantage of Microsoft’s Resultant Set Of Policy (RSOP) tool.

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