A Warning about Hidden Costs

Sunday, August 23, 2015 Posted by Corey Harrell 3 comments
I saw the excitement in my son's eyes as the biggest smile was stretching from ear to ear. He slowly stretched out his arm to show me what he got at camp that day. He was extremely excited and I could sense his happiness as I heard him say "I won it with only one dollar. I did it on my first try. Can we keep it?" My eyes focused on what was in his hand. It was a plastic bag with a small goldfish swimming around. "I won it at the fair today. Can we keep it?" In that split second I quickly ran through what owning a fish might entail and it was very similar to the picture used in this post. I then said "yes, we can keep it". My son excitedly ran to his summer camp counselor with so much excitement to tell her the fish was going home with him.

As we were walking to pick up my youngest son I realized the first thing I didn't think about. My five year old would be upset seeing his brother with a goldfish and knowing he doesn't have one. I thought problem solved; we'll just buy him one at the pet store while we are there getting supplies. We reached my five year old in his camp and his eyes grew bigger and bigger as he saw the bag. "Is that a fish" he asked and my seven year old replied "Daddy is getting you one too".  At that moment both kids had smiles as they kept staring at the little fish swimming in the bag. As we were walking down the hall we walked past another parent. She saw the bag with the fish and nervously said "Oh lucky you". I laughed and I could see she was a bit nervous walking down the hall to pick up her kid.

On the drive home, I remembered what my wife said at one point. Dam, my wife. Make that item number two that didn’t cross my mind when my son asked me if we could keep the fish. She has been dead set against owning a fish and this time playing like I misunderstood or didn’t hear her won’t work. “Absolutely no fish" is pretty clear. I knew I wasn’t getting out of this one so I thought I might as well get something out of it. I sent her a text message saying the boys had a big surprise for her. Despite her continued texts trying to guess the surprise on my drive home I wouldn't answer them and I only deflected saying she had to wait.

As my wife opened the door both of my sons went running up to her. They said guess what a few times trying to gather their thoughts from their excitement. Then my seven year old says "at the fair I won a fish on my first try. I did it with only one dollar. Daddy said we could keep it and he is getting Gab one too." She started to give me that stare until she walked over and started watching the fish swim around in its bag of water. Maybe she ran through what a fish would entail too but maybe not. Whatever it was I wasn't going to ask when she said it looks like we are making a trip to the pet store.

On the drive to the pet store my wife and I were on the same page. We would get to the store then buy a basic tank, a second fish, and some food. As we walked up and down the aisle there were tanks of all sizes. Not sure what size we needed we asked the store for assistance. The cashier said he would send over the fish lady. I gave him a puzzled look and was like "fish lady?" He said that's what we call her since she knows everything about fish.

We continued walking up and down the aisle waiting for the fish lady while continuously stopping my boys from wrestling each other. A younger girl was walking towards us and I asked if she was the fish lady. She laughed and then explained all the tanks and fish she owns. I told her we were looking for a tank to hold two goldfish. She said each fish should have least 10 gallons of water and then I glanced at the shelf. At that moment I knew getting the small basic tank we thought that would work was no longer an option. Nope, we had to get a real fish tank. As we continued listening to the fish lady she started going down the list of things we would need. Water conditioner, food, gravel for the bottom of the tank, filter, vegetation (fake or real), a stand for the tank to keep it level, structures for the fish to hide in, and the list went on. My wife and I both reached for our phones to confirm what she was saying without her noticing (we research everything before buying something). We were making sure she wasn't trying to pull a fast one on us and our quick research confirmed what the fish lady said. I even saw the weekly work that owning a fish entails. I stopped counting all of the things I didn’t think about when I quickly ran through the list of what I thought owning a fish entails.

After hearing the fish lady I said that's a lot more than I was expecting. My kid won a fish at the fair and we thought we would only need a basic tank. She cracked a smile and then said "oh, a fair fish huh". After she helped us and was walking away I got the feeling this must happen a lot. Parents getting a fish at the fair, going to the fish store, and then getting hit over the head with what it really entails to own a fish. We grabbed a shopping cart, grabbed all of our supplies, the fish my five year old picked out, and selected the stand for our 20 gallon tank. As we left the store I kept thinking about the dollar fish that just cost us hundreds of dollars. That evening I spent hours putting together the stand and tank while my wife was cleaning all the items going into the tank (another thing we weren't expecting).

What I thought owning a fish entailed was nothing close to what is actually involved with owning a fish. Spending a dollar to win a fish was nothing compared to the hundreds of dollars needed to take care of the fish. The weekly work I envisioned was a lot less than the actual work I have been doing for weeks.

If I could do it again knowing now what I didn't know when we sent our son to camp that day. I would do things differently. I would had told him to save his dollar and do not bring home any fish. Mommy and I are doing some research and then next weekend we will go get the supplies and fish to set up a nice tank. It will be better than just watching two goldfish swimming around in a 20 gallon tank. This is the approach I would had taken. The approach of not trying to make things work with a dollar fish because in the end I still paid the same amount as I would had going with the better option in the first place.

My guess is this story plays out every year at a lot of organizations. The only exception is organizations are not dealing with goldfish but tools.

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Go Against the Grain

Wednesday, August 12, 2015 Posted by Corey Harrell 0 comments
“You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.” —Richard Buckminster Fuller

It's very easy to accept the way things are and say in response "it is what it is". It's easy to say I tried and give up when others push back against the things you want to change. It's easy to say this is how we always did it so why change anything now. Now let's put this into context of information security. It's easy to accept the thinking "that no one gets security" and then take on the mentality of not doing anything to change it by saying "it is what it is". It's easy to say I tried and give up when you make an attempt change how people approach security but then get push back by others. It's easy to say this is how we always approached securing our organization so why change anything now.

The quote I opened this post with nicely summarizes how you can go against the grain and put an organization on a better path to addressing their security risks. How you can change the existing security strategy focused on prevention to one focused on a balance between prevention, detection, and response. Start building the better approach (model) to enable others to see the value it adds. Continue building out the better approach and showing value to others. Showing the value and benefits results in people buying into the new approach. Eventually the change will take hold putting the organization on the better path. Building the better approach is more effective than fighting against the existing reality and those who are complacent with the way things are. Changing the security strategy won't occur without some resistance. There will be remnants of those who resist your changes and will fight to make things go back to the way things were. Those remnants won't be as successful in influencing change because they will be fighting against a new reality and they will lack the motivation and/or determination to go against the grain to build a better model.
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Minor Updates to Auto_rip

Monday, August 10, 2015 Posted by Corey Harrell 5 comments
This is a quick post to pass along that I updated my auto_rip script. For those who may not know, auto_rip is a wrapper script for Harlan Carvey's RegRipper program and it executes RegRipper’s plug-ins based on categories and in a specific order. To learn more about my script please see my previous post Unleashing auto_rip. The auto_rip updates are pretty minor. I separated out the changes to a change log instead of documenting changes in the script itself, added a device category (due to a new plug-in), and I added most of the new RegRipper plug-ins Harlan created (as of 7/30/15). The download location can be found on the right of my blog or using this link to its Google drive location.


****** 08/11/2015  Update *******

At this time I removed the compiled executable from auto_rip. The compiled executable is having issues and I'm working to resolve it. However, the perl script is present and works fine. As soon as I'm able to compile the script into an exe then I'll add it back to the auto_rip archive