On Tuesday, December 27, 2011 10:13:12 PM Bennett Haselton wrote:
> Roughly what percent of the time is there such an unpatched exploit in the
> wild, so that the machine can be hacked by someone keeping up with the
> exploits?  

While I did reply elsewhere in the thread, I want to address this specifically.

I can give you a percentage number very easily.  The answer is 100%.  There is 
always an unpatched exploit in the wild; just because it's not been found by 
the upstream vendor (and by extension the CentOS project) doesn't mean it's not 
being used in the wild.  I would hazard to say the risk from an unknown, but 
used, exploit is far greater than the 'window of opportunity' exploits you seem 
to be targeting.

I would also hazard to say that it would be similar in risk to 'window of 
opportunity' exploit timing in the Windows world; not because the OS's are 
similar in terms of security but because 'window of opportunity' exploit timing 
is the same regardless of the general security of the OS.  And I think studies 
of 'window of opportunity' exploits have been done and are publicly available.

I say this after having performing a risk assessment of our infrastructure 
myself, incidentally. It's not a matter of 'if' you will be hacked, but 'when,' 
and this is being acknowledged in high-level security circles.

So you plan your high-availability solution accordingly, and plan for outages 
due to security issues just like you'd plan for network or power outages.  This 
is becoming standard operating procedure in many places.
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