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Trust, Cooperation,
& Flexibility Are Secrets To NCC Telecom ISAC Success
Arlington, Va., January 15, 2004
- The National Coordinating Center Telecommunications Infrastructure
Information Sharing and Analysis Center (NCC Telecom ISAC) operates
much like the framework of interconnected and interdependent network
systems that make up the telecommunications industry. Just as carriers
swap voice and data traffic with one another, the NCC Telecom-ISAC
depends on the swift exchange of information among industry representatives
and between industry and the Government. But unlike the competitive
nature of the telecommunications industry – where companies
battle each other for the consumer’s dollar – the NCC
Telecom ISAC operates in a cooperative and trusted environment.
Representatives from all segments of the telecommunications sector
work with and rely on each other to achieve a common objective:
to help safeguard the telecommunications infrastructure from all
hazards, ranging from cable cuts to natural disasters to information
network attacks and terrorist attacks.
The 32 members (29 companies and 3 associations)
of the NCC Telecom ISAC, as well Government sources and other liaison
partners, feed information and requests into the 24x7 Watch and
Analysis Operation, which manages the entire Telecom ISAC information
sharing process and provides the central analysis function for the
ISAC. Information shared may deal with vulnerabilities, threats,
intrusions, anomalies, and mitigation responses, or may simply offer
a forum for requesting information from the rest of the NCC Telecom-ISAC
membership.
NCC Telecom ISAC members place a high premium on
preserving the culture of trust they have established, as all of
the information received from members of the Telecom ISAC is deemed
sensitive and proprietary and only the originator of information
may approve its release to anyone or any entity. “The reason
that the NCC Telecom ISAC is successful is that we have a trusted
relationship between industry and Government, and that began with
the National Coordinating Center for Telecommunications,”
said Air Force Lt. Col. Frances Wentworth, who is the NCC Telecom
ISAC Program Manager. Adds Ms. Ernie Gormsen of Verizon Communications,
the NCC Telecom ISAC Industry Chair, “the trust did not develop
overnight. Because we know each other so well and collaborate on
a daily basis, we end up trusting the individual more than the corporation.”
Although the ISAC concept is a relatively new development,
the foundations for the NCC Telecom ISAC’s trusted environment
have been in place since 1984 with the establishment of the NCC,
part of the Department of Homeland Security’s National Communications
System’s (NCS). The private sector created ISACs in response
to the issuance of Presidential Decision Directive 63 in 1998, which
proposed that various sectors of the national economy establish
ISACs, including the information and communication sector.
In light of the fact that the NCC had already been
performing the functions of an ISAC, the NCC was officially recognized
as an ISAC in January 2000. Since then, the NCC Telecom ISAC has
quickly evolved into an important conduit for sharing information
related to the protection of the Nation’s homeland, national,
and economic security interests. Its watch and analysis operation
became 24x7 in September 2001. Also, because it draws on the technical
expertise of the telecommunications sector, the NCC Telecom ISAC
has become a central hub in facilitating the management and resolution
of information network incidents. In 2002, for example, the NCC
Telecom ISAC provided a member company with its first notification
of the NIMDA worm, resulting in the successful defense of the company’s
networks. That same company, in turn, was the first to notify the
ISAC of problems associated with the simple network management protocol.
Most recently, the NCC Telecom ISAC assisted in the mitigation of
the Blaster worm and SoBig virus. “There’s a common
misperception (outside the industry) that telecom is only about
the telephone,” said Lt. Col. Wentworth. “Telecommunications
doesn’t mean telephone. We use the definition of telecommunications
from Federal Standard 1037c, and our concept of operations describes
the telecommunications infrastructure as the framework of interdependent
telecommunication networks and systems, including both physical
and software components, by which the telecommunications industry
conducts, transmits, or receives information of any nature, by wire,
radio, optical, or other electromagnetic systems.”
Lt. Col. Wentworth said this broad definition is reflected
in the membership of the Telecom ISAC – companies that provide
telecommunications or network services, equipment, or software to
the communications and information sector – including wireline,
wireless, satellite, and Internet service providers and vendors;
software providers, system integrators, and telecom professional
organizations/associations. “Together,” she said, ”they
have a broad reach into the industry.”
NCC Telecom ISAC members say it has evolved in connection
with the rapid changes in technology and the threat environment.
“We are not focusing so much on individual circuits these
days,” said AT&T’s Harry Underhill, the NCC Telecom
ISAC Industry Vice-Chair, longtime NCC participant, and resident
member of the Telecom ISAC. “Much of critical infrastructure
protection is now considered to be National Security and Emergency
Preparedness (NS/EP) communications.”
Members of the NCC Telecom ISAC also point out that
because the threat environment is constantly in flux, there is no
such thing as a typical day. One day, the most pressing matter might
be assessing the aftermath of a hurricane; the next day, members
could find themselves working to determine the source of a potential
cyber attack. Sometimes, NCC Telecom ISAC members react to a host
of potential hazards all at once. A good example is the confluence
of events that transpired last August 14. On that Friday afternoon,
while NCC Telecom ISAC members busily shared information related
to computer viruses and a looming hurricane off the coast of Texas,
a massive power outage affected large parts of the northeastern
United States and eastern Canada. This was the largest blackout
in North American history, affecting an estimated 50 million people
and covering an area of approximately 9,300 square miles. It also
affected 100 power plants, of which 22 were nuclear power plants,
and several critical infrastructures, including telecommunications,
banking and finance, energy, and transportation.
The NCC, the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
and Department of Transportation coordinated the supply of fuel
and generators to the affected areas to ensure that communications
systems remained online. The NCC also communicated with Industry
Canada and Canada's Office of Critical Infrastructure Protection
and Emergency Preparedness to obtain information regarding the incident.
During the outage, members of the Telecom ISAC coordinated
extensively with the North American Electric Reliability Council,
which represents the Electricity Sector ISAC. It was an excellent
example of ISAC-to-ISAC coordination and mutual support. As Ms.
Gormsen notes, “The only constant in our daily operations
is that we are constantly establishing a dialogue.”
Members point to the NCC Telecom ISAC’s integration
of industry representatives, Government partners, and support contractors
as one of its biggest advantages. While some ISACs’ members
and operational staff are separate, the Telecom ISAC operates physically
within the walls of the NCC, allowing for easy collaboration and
trust-building between its industry members, the Government, and
the contractor watch analysts, including the occasional impromptu
hallway meeting.
The location also enables its resident member representatives
– those who are physically stationed within the Telecom ISAC
– and also some of the representatives in the local area to
interact personally on a daily basis with each other and with the
Government staff and contractors that manage the NCC’s 24x7
watch center.
Lt. Col. Wentworth stresses, however, that the Telecom ISAC’s
non-resident and geographically distant members are just as integral
to its success as the resident members. “It is ultimately
irrelevant as to who is here physically – it is more about
who is in touch,” she points out. “Residents members
do get the added benefit of personal company contacts and relationships,
but all members – resident or not – are available at
all times, interact with the watch analysts, and with the Government
operations staff, and participate in our weekly conference calls.”
Another big advantage that the NCC Telecom ISAC enjoys
is that companies do not have to pay to become members because the
U.S. Government funds the NCC Telecom ISAC’s 24x7 watch and
analysis operation and its member companies pay their representatives’
salaries. This arrangement is largely credited with fostering the
widespread participation of the telecommunications industry in the
ISAC. Mr. Underhill said that while this model is a perfect fit
for the telecommunications industry, he cautions about applying
it to other ISACs. “I don’t think there’s a one-size-fits-all
model for other ISACs,” he said. “We communicate all
day with each other because we have to – our networks are
connected. I am not sure we can say this about the other infrastructures
– we do this out of necessity.” And Lt. Col. Wentworth
says the structure of the NCC Telecom ISAC is a win-win relationship.
“We can’t begin to measure the pro bono benefits that
the Government gains,” she adds. Mr. Don Smith, Manager of
the NCC and NCC Telecom ISAC Government Chair, concurs, saying,“…the
Government can’t put a dollar value on what we get from industry
and what they bring to the table. They’re integrated into
the process and extend out to other telecommunications security
forums.”
Indeed, several NCC Telecom ISAC members also lend
their technical and operational expertise to the policy task forces
of the President’s National Security and Telecommunications
Advisory Committee and to the NCS Network Security Information Exchanges.
Members say it is a natural fit and a good leveraging of synergies.
“Sometimes a solution to a policy matter may be operational
in nature - it’s kind of a closed loop,” notes Mr. Underhill.
And as Ms. Gormsen explains, ISAC members must also stand ready
to reach back to their companies for various reasons, such as for
additional technical assistance or for general relationship-building
purposes. “A lot of what we do is ensure relationships and
trust within our companies, just as we have to maintain trust within
the ISAC,” she said. “Just because we are resident members
does not mean we are just NCC or ISAC centric,” explained
Mr. Underhill. “Our role has a lot to do with building and
maintaining relationships with our companies.”
Going forward, members of the Telecom ISAC recommend
maintaining the status quo with regard to its structure and operation.
“The NCC Telecom ISAC has worked very well,” said Lt.
Col. Wentworth. “The goal should not be to break the community
of trust.”
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