Netflix Just Announced a User Focused Security Application (netflix.com) 43
Moving beyond movies and TV shows (and their DVDs), Netflix announced on Tuesday Stethoscope, its "first project following a User Focused Security approach." From a company's blog post: The notion of "User Focused Security" acknowledges that attacks
against corporate users (e.g., phishing, malware) are the primary mechanism leading to security incidents and data breaches, and it's one of the core principles driving our approach to corporate information security. [...] Stethoscope is a web application that collects information for a given user's devices and gives them clear and specific recommendations for securing their systems. If we provide employees with focused, actionable information and low-friction tools, we believe they can get their devices into a more secure state without heavy-handed policy enforcement. The company says Stethoscope tracks disk encryption, firewall, automatic updates, up-to-date OS/software, screen lock, jailbroken/rooted status, security software stack configurations of the device.
In next weeks news get your nails done at Autozone (Score:3)
Wow - this is some pretty cool stuff and I commend Netflix for doing it, but really? Netflix?
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I guess it might give your employer a reason to remove Netflix from the blacklist?
Corporate whitelisting of Netflix services.
Thank you for helping identify the Netflix Ulterior Motive.
Re:In next weeks news get your nails done at Autoz (Score:4, Interesting)
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I was about to say the same. That's pretty much how Amazon became the biggest cloud computing operator out there: by renting out what they developed internally.
Re:In next weeks news get your nails done at Autoz (Score:4, Informative)
They open source a lot of their in-house software.
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That's interesting, wish I was a better coder, I would consider seeing if I could use some of that interface code to make a Kodi compatible Netflix plugin.
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My Playstation 3, Wii, and BluRay player all have a client that works. I'm trying to consolidate down to one system.
Literally all it would take to have a "client" that worked would be for them to code their website in such a way that I could navigate with arrow keys.....
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I think it's a great idea.
I always thought businesses that have customers in waiting should have secondary services to soak a few extra bucks off of them and to make their time less wasted. When I was in League City they built a Carwash and Grill. The idea was to eat steak and drink while you were getting a car wash, what I considered genius, but they never actually opened the grill while I still lived there, just the bar. So drive there, get drunk drive home. I had an issue with this, but went there an
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Wow - this is some pretty cool stuff and I commend Netflix for doing it, but really? Netflix?
It's a tool developed for internal, corporate users, to make Netflix's own operations more secure. They've decided to open source it, probably in hope that others will have good ideas to make it better.
SCAP (Score:2)
How is this fundamentally different than using SCAP or OVAL content to do a STIG check against a host and then apply remediations against findings? Other than it will hopefully allow "normal" users to understand what the problem is and what to do about it. But normal users probably aren't going to grab an open source security scanner and then follow the recommendations. They would then be abnormal users, by definition.
Need to tune what's being approved (Score:2)
I see three things that are properly called "press releases" in the headlines of Slashdot this morning. It's a typical beginner mistake. Please stop.
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Maybe, but I have to say that your movies library is quite limited and not worth the monthly fee.
Very glad it's open source. (Score:2)
Upon seeing that it's open source, I'm already starting to brainstorm how to help local schools and libraries set this thing up. Neat!
Conflict between up to date and not rooted (Score:2)
I couldn't find a public "check my phone" link, or I'd've tried it.
But two of the "practices" listed in Netflix's blog post [netflix.com] appear to conflict. One is "Up-to-date OS/software", an the other is "Not jailbroken/rooted". What does it say when the latest official system software image for a particular device is no longer supported? Does it recommend that the user trade off the "not rooted" practice to obtain "up-to-date OS" by flashing the LineageOS distribution of Android?
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I couldn't find a public "check my phone" link, or I'd've tried it.
I believe that would be because your phone is not enrolled in an MDM manager.
From the article: "Stethoscope is a web application that collects information for a given user's devices"
This implies it is a web app that, by itself, checks your device and maybe even enumerates/discovers
your devices. That would make it a scary security hole rather than a security tool since web apps really
should not be able to access any state of health information on a device (though some is quite leakable these days.)
Fortunat
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I believe that would be because your phone is not enrolled in an MDM manager.
That'd be fine if there were a "Send me to Google Play Store to temporarily enroll my phone in Netflix's MDM for the duration of the test" button.
Downloadable video (Score:2)
I guess nobody else noticed that Netflix recently started supporting downloadable video.
I'd guess that they had to pinky-swear to content providers that they would make some effort to educate users on security, help them secure their computers and devices and networks, etc. etc. etc.
Software won't fix the real problem (Score:2)
" The company says Stethoscope tracks disk encryption, firewall, automatic updates, up-to-date OS/software, screen lock, jailbroken/rooted status, security software stack configurations of the device."
Fantastic! Which one of those stops the user clicking on the nice shiny link in the email claiming to be from the helpdesk and telling them they need to reset their password instantly or lose their account, then filling in their account details for the nice phisher?
Oh yeah, none of them. Good luck with that.
Not really (Score:2)
jailbroken/rooted status,
Which makes it automatically a user-hostile approach.
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Maybe, but it'd work well for company owned gear though.