Software factories must be protected like 'crown jewels,' AF official says
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The massive hacking campaign that breached multiple federal government agencies via Solarwinds software has Defense Department officials taking a closer look at protecting some of its more nascent efforts – namely, software factories.
The massive hacking campaign that breached multiple federal government agencies via Solarwinds software has Defense Department officials taking a closer look at protecting some of its more nascent efforts – namely, software factories.
"These digital factories that we are using to design things may become crown jewels, and they'll have to be protected as such," Will Roper, the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics, told reporters Dec. 18 during a virtual Defense Writers Group event.
That becomes an acute challenge for newer programs such as the Air Force's Cloud One and Platform One, which respectively centralize data sharing and tool development capabilities. With a single attack on either, “effects would ripple into other programs," Roper said.
During his talk, Roper stressed DOD's need for zero-trust principles on a large scale.
"The other thing that we have to bring into our software environment, into our digital infrastructure -- which the department is behind on -- is new technologies that allow you to deal with adversaries that have gotten in -- so zero-trust technologies and doing continuous monitoring," Roper said.
"We don't do that in the Defense Department. We certify things are impregnable, and commercial industry assumes everything is pregnant and has to deal with that after the fact."
Roper said the goal is to both keep adversaries out while having a plan for once they get in and building on those technologies, particularly with initiatives like Cloud and Platform One. The Air Force has been using red teaming to test systems’ security in the wake of Solarwinds Orion software vulnerability, he said, but that new approaches can often mean new targets.
If you create a game-changing approach to change the [defense procurement] system, that game-changing approach is likely the new thing your adversary targets," Roper said. "Welcome to the digital age."
This article was first posted to FCW, a sibling site to GCN.