Equifax Security Breach – Time for a Change In Mindset

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I was reading a blog post from the Cloud Security Alliance (here) about the on-going mess and disinformation around Equifax’s security breach.

The article makes a very good point. Sadly Security is seen as just a cost, and whilst people have that mindset we will see decisions being made that favours ‘high share value now’ over long time assurance of sensitive data which means that ‘now value doesnt nose dive’.


The article goes on to show the approximate cost to the US public of the breach. But if we can quantify the costs, can we not quantify the value of protection?

Even with today’s legislation in many countries it is a legal obligation to disclose the details of a security breach. The only problem here, is ignorance is bliss, if I don’t know I’m being compromised then nothing to report. The blog post also points out that often the only time security investment is recognised is, and often that information doesn’t propergate within an organisation. This got me to thinking why can’t companies also disclose how many attempts on their security have been mitigated on in the same way companies have to declare profit and loss.

It could produce some interesting information, as you could compare data from different companies of similar profile. When plotting the data, any outliers suggest something maybe wrong. But it would give consumers a means to decide do they trust their data with X over Y when they get a chance to influence the decision.  But we’re now moving into the territory where security is becoming a positive measure.  If nothing else it may engender an ‘arms war’ of who has the best protection.

As with all things, they way you measure something influences behaviour. This sort of measurement may encourage companies to invest in more ‘white hat’ attacks. That’s no bad thing as if a white hat attack suceeds – the vulnerability has been found.

The interesting thing is that, the article points out that Equifax and other large companies that have been breached have been certified as ISO 9001 compliant, PCI DSS compliant and so on. The issue here is, that these accreditations have a strong emphasis on process and policy, and are down to the auditor spotting non-compliance. In a large organisation the opportunity to steer the auditor towards what is good exists. But more importantly, process requires people to know and follow it. Following process and being prepared to uphold the processes requires an organizational culture that genders its adherence. I can have a rulebook as big as the Encyclopedia Britannica but if my boss, and his boss apply constant pressure to say we have to deliver and there is no repercutions to bending the rules – well then I’m going to start bending.

Leaders like Gray understand the value of an organization’s culture. This can be defined as the set of deeply embedded, self-reinforcing behaviors, beliefs, and mind-sets that determine “how we do things around here.” People within an organizational culture share a tacit understanding of the way the world works, their place in it, the informal and formal dimensions of their workplace, and the value of their actions. Though it seems intangible, the culture has a substantial influence on everyday actions and on performance.

https://www.strategy-business.com/article/11108?gko=f4e8d

This brings us back to the idea – hard data on the execution (not that i have a process for execution) will give strong indications of compliance. This kind of data is difficult to fudge and with a good sample set, then fudges  are more likely to stand out.

Practical? I don’t know, but worth exploring? If we are to change security thinking then yes.

APIs and OMESA video

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If you like seeing or hearing people like Arturo Viveros, Luis Weir and myself (not for me  :-0 ) discussing OMESA.io (Open Modern Enterprise Software Architecture) and APIs then you’ll like the following video, recorded with Bob Rhubart of Oracle Developer Community ArchBeat fame at Oracle Open World 2017.

UKOUG Partner of the Year Awards – contribution to bringing Glassware Home

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Proud to have been part of the Capgemini team who picked up some Glassware last night at ther UK Oracle User Group Partner of the Year Awards …

UKOUG Awards evening

UKOUG Awards Won by Capgemini

 

Gold – Business Transformation

Silver – Middleware

ODC Appreciation Day : Apiary Editor

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This post is my contribution to the Oracle Developer Community (ODC) Appreciation Day. The idea of the event is best explained by Oracle Base – go here.

The Apiary Editor has to count as a pretty new entry into the possible features that could be considered with Apiary only coming into the Oracle family in the last year. Apiary as a solution provides a platform by which modern REST based APIs can be designed, documented and simulated. Apiary supports the API First design philosophy (more here) using API Blueprint notation or Swagger (now known as Open API).

The feature I want to focus on is the Apiary Editor itself (shown below), particularly when working with the API Blueprint.  The beauty of the solution is that as the documentation or API syntax is edited in the editing side (left)  the API definition/documentation immediately appears on the presentation side of the editor  (right) making it easy both see the technical specificastion and how the information is initially presented to a potential API user. This makes it really easy to understand the clarity of what is being communicated which is one of the important aspects of an API definition and API first.

Whilst Agile development states ‘prefer working code over documentation’ this provides agility as you can develop the API definition and allow people to develop against the contract we can still easily deliver quality API descriptions with sufficient information to make it understandable to a 3rd party.

Becoming an Oracle Ace

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On Friday 29th September, 2 days before the commencement of Oracle’s most important event of the year – OpenWorld whilst attending the Oracle Partner Advisory Council I received word that I had been promoted to a full Oracle Ace.

For those not working in the Oracle ecosystem this is comparable to being confirmed as a Microsoft MVP, a SAP Mentor or Java Champion. These schemes recognize contributions made by non employees to the community and the parent company itself. These contributions range across public speaking, articles for journals, helping through the various community sites and blogging among others. Hoist the accreditation is based on contribution, to be a successful contributor you need to be deeply knowledgable in your specialisms.

The importance of the Ace recognition is important for my employer (Capgemini) and for myself for different reasons. For an employer the association of expertise can be a key value propositions, and some Oracle partners actually use the number of Aces they employee as a key part of their differentiator and market proposition. Secondly, being out communicating with the community raises brand awareness increasing the chances of both sales but also make the company more attractive as a potential employer. Finally, through participating with in events you get to know product managers and other scenario Oracle people. As a result, when additional support and engagement is needed you have the contacts to draw on. But is not just help, the opportunity to contribute to product development exists. In many respects this can become a virtuous circle – the more you do the more opportunities open up, the more you can do.

For me personally the Ace programme is a very friendly embracing community that whilst can be commercially competitive is very mutually supportive. This combined with the fact that the culture of sharing knowledge is actively encouraged, supported and acknowledgement of those efforts is always satisfying.

In the middleware space there are less than 50 active Oracle Aces of all grades globally. Four of those are in the UK  Luis Weir (Ace Director – Capgemini), Simon Haslam (Ace Director – eProseed), Mark Simpson (Ace Director – Griffiths Waite) and myself. I am also fortunate enough to count all three as friends.

Presentations from Oracle Open World

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With Oracle Open World 2017 over the ICS presentation is available at – Oracle integration cloud service (ICS) best practices learned from the field (OOW17)

We saw a lot of exciting new features and capabilities coming from Oracle in the ICS space. So keep an eye on the site as we publish new articles.

The API Platform presentation that was co-presented with Luis Weir is here…

Build up to Oracle Open World 17

With Oracle Open World 2017 only a few weeks away we are in overdrive in terms of preparation. The first couple of chapters of our next book are heading to Packt so will be available through Alpha schema by the time of OOW. You can see the book at Packt (here) or on Amazon (here – note cover is wrong here).

8683The book now has its own domain at apiplatform.cloud which we’re quickly putting together. As the book progresses we will be making supporting content available.

With Open world there are the commercial activities of creating some fresh brochures. Not only important generally, but to help as Capgemini will have a large stand and will be sponsoring some activities.

Open world itself will be a busy week with two presentations (one each on ICS and API Platform), and three video casts pencilled in with Dev Archbeat from the developer lounge.

Out there Talking

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headphones_150So we’ve got more talking going on than writing at present. With an appearance on another OTN Podcast about Microservices and their relationship to SOA (or not) which includes thought leaders such as Chris Richardson (http://microservices.io/).

Then we have in September presentations for the UKOUG Developer SIG and Middleware and Integration SIG.

All before Open World this year, where I am due to speak twice; once with my ICS co-author Robert van Mölken and once with Luis Weir on APIs.

 

 

 

Chatbot Blogs

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I have been fortunate to be supporting and occasionally contributing to a series of blogs on Chatbots written by Leon Smiers, Capgemini Oracle Chatbot SME (and also Oracle Ace).  The blog posts are:

I’ve been talking with Leon about what’s next in the blog series, and we can expect to see some more exciting blog posts in the series.

Chatbot Maturity Model

UKOUG Conference

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As part of the UKOUG SIG committee for middleware I have had the opportunity to contribute to the planning of the conference in December (Tech17). The agenda looks really exciting with a range a high class submissions covering on-premises to cloud, from micro to monolith, API to application, source to SOA.

Presenters go from newbies to world class names, not to mention key Oracle product managers.

Here are a couple of tweets from the planning day …

 

 

https://twitter.com/UKOUG/status/883389052166078464