Oracle has lashed out against security
experts who criticized the company's security record.
The database vendor is "leading the software industry in terms of responsible
development and security," charged Eric Maurice, manager for security in
Oracle's global technology business unit in a posting on a
company blog.
Security researchers in the past weeks have
targeted Oracle with multiple
studies and blog postings. Both security vendor
NGS Software and analyst firm
Enterprise Strategy Group
(ESG) have published studies comparing the number of software updates in Oracle
and Microsoft databases. Both studies found that Microsoft outshone its
competitor.
Argentinean security vendor Argeniss
last week said that it was planning to organise a
'Week of Oracle Database
Bugs'. The company said it would release details of one unpatched security
vulnerability every day for one week to demonstrate the poor level of Oracle's
database security. The company has since suspended the event.
Oracle's Maurice wrote his blog posting in response to "articles and blog
entries", but didn't specifically mention the ESG, NGS Software or Argeniss
cases.
However he appeared to address the NGS Software and ESG studies by claiming
that others were "trying to play the number game" and countered that the
database vendor won't let "external perception drive our security policies".
He touted the company's support for the Common Vulnerability Scoring System,
a relatively new standard that provides an independent way of rating the
severity of security flaws. The programme is headed up by Cisco, while Microsoft
is famously absent from its supporter list.
Indirectly lashing out at Argeniss, Maurice described researchers who
published zero day exploits as irresponsible.
Rich Mogull, a research vice president with
Gartner who heads up the firm's Information
Security and Risk practice, said that the blog posting was mostly a public
relations move.
While he agreed with the database vendor that disclosing zero day
vulnerabilities is irresponsible, he told vnunet.com that the vendor's claim
that it is "leading the industry in terms of responsible development and
security" is overblown.
"I would not say that Oracle is an industry leader yet. They need to mature
as an organisation in how they manage these vulnerabilities," Mogull told
vnunet.com.
"Oracle is putting practices in place, but they definitely aren’t as far
along as some of the others."
He also pointed out that there hasn't yet been a large scale attack targeting
Oracle databases. If such a worm would surface however, it could cause major
damage to corporate data or erase it altogether.
Customers are telling Oracle that they are dissatisfied with the firm's
security record and the large number of patches it releases, but they aren't yet
switching to competing products, Mogull added.
"If customers start buying other products, that would cause Oracle to change
very quickly."
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article