Packet Detectives Episode 3: Is my video conferencing really secure?

Original Entry by : Michael Morris

Demystifying Network Investigations with Packet Data

By Michael Morris, Director of Global Business Development, Endace


Michael Morris, Director of Global Business Development, Endace

The Covid-19 pandemic has seen us all become all too familiar with video conferencing tools as we’ve switched to work-from-home. Zoom, Webex, GoToMeeting, and Microsoft Teams are all part of our daily work routine now.

We assume that all these services are secure and the content of our web conferencing and collaboration is encrypted and safe from eavesdroppers. But is it really secure? And where is all that data stored anyway?

In this third installment of Packet Detectives, industry-renowned SharkFest presenter and all-round Wireshark guru, Betty DuBois, takes an in-depth look at a web-conferencing session to find the answers to these questions, and shows how you can do the same for the web conferencing tools you use.

We hope you find this video useful. Please let us know if you have ideas for other examples you’d like to see.


Packet Detectives Episode 2: The Case of the Unknown TLS Versions

Original Entry by : Michael Morris

Demystifying Network Investigations with Packet Data

By Michael Morris, Director of Global Business Development, Endace


Michael Morris, Director of Global Business Development, Endace

As we discussed with Ixia and Plixer recently in our How to Combat Encrypted Threats webinar (which you can watch here if you are interested) newer versions – 1.2 and 1.3 – of TLS should be preferred over older versions – 1.0 and 1.1 – because they’re much more secure, and better protect data in flight.

But removing older versions of TLS from your network can be challenging. First, identifying which versions are actually being used. Second, identifying which servers and clients are using outdated versions. And lastly, updating any servers inside your network that are using older TLS versions, and potentially blocking access to servers outside the network using older versions too, all without causing your users to scream!

It’s not just users you need to worry about either. Potentially you may have IoT devices on your network that are still using older TLS versions.

Thankfully, if you have access to recorded network traffic there’s an easy way …

In this second installment of Packet Detectives, industry-renowned SharkFest presenter and all-round Wireshark guru, Betty DuBois, shows how you can quickly answer all these questions using Wireshark to analyze the TLS traffic on your network to see which hosts and clients are using which versions. She has even created a special, custom Wireshark profile you can download to make the analysis even easier!

The truth is in the packets …

We hope you find this video useful. Please let us know if you have ideas for other examples you’d like to see.


Packet Detectives Episode 1: The Case of the Retransmissions

Original Entry by : Michael Morris

Demystifying Network Investigations with Packet Data

By Michael Morris, Director of Global Business Development, Endace


Michael Morris, Director of Global Business Development, Endace

As I talk to security analysts, network operations engineers and applications teams around the world a common theme regularly emerges: that troubleshooting security or performance issues with log or flow data alone just doesn’t cut it.

Most folks report spending way too many hours troubleshooting problems only to realize they just don’t have enough detail to know exactly what happened. Often this results in more finger pointing and unresolved issues. Too much time spent investigating issues also causes other alerts to start piling up, resulting in stress and undue risk to the organisation from a backlog of alerts that never get looked at.

On the other hand, those that use full packet capture data to troubleshoot problems report significantly faster resolution times and greater confidence because they can see exactly what happened on the wire.

Many folks I talk to also say they don’t have the expertise necessary to troubleshoot issues using packet data. But it’s actually much easier than you might expect. Packet decode tools – like Wireshark – are powerful and quite self-explanatory. And there’s tons of resources available on the web to help you out. You don’t need to be a mystical, networking guru to gain valuable insights from packet data!

Getting to the relevant packets is quick and easy too thanks to the EndaceProbe platform’s integration with solutions from our Fusion Partners like Cisco, IBM, Palo Alto Networks, Splunk and many others. Analysts can quickly pivot from alerts in any of those tools directly to related packet data with a single click, gaining valuable insights into their problems quickly and confidently.

To help further, we thought it would be useful to kick-off a video series of “real-world” investigation scenarios to show just how easily packet data can be used to investigate and resolve difficult issues (security or performance-related) in your network.

So here’s the first video in what we hope to make a regular series. Watch as industry-renowned SharkFest presenter and all-round Wireshark guru, Betty Dubois, walks us through investigating an application slow-down that is problems for users. The truth is in the packets …

We hope you find this video useful. Please let us know if you have ideas for other examples you’d like to see.