Macsec use cases are valid when working with hop by hop encryption needs 
between closets / buildings where structured wiring is not within control of 
agency personnel,  in the case of other states we provide consulting services 
to,  think multi tenant building with shared closet from other state agencies 
or building leases with outsourced cabling.  Router / firewall based Vpn is an 
option as well if transiting a consolidated state network or sp based public or 
private network.  The physical sec control to mitigate true end to end helps 
reign back some of the costed options.


9.3.16.6 Transmission Confidentiality and Integrity (SC-8)

Information systems that receive, process, store, or transmit FTI, must:

a. Protecttheconfidentialityandintegrityoftransmittedinformation.
b. Implement cryptographic mechanisms to prevent unauthorized disclosure of FTI

and detect changes to information during transmission across the wide area 
network (WAN) and within the local area network (LAN). (CE1)

If encryption is not used, to reduce the risk of unauthorized access to FTI, 
the agency must use physical means (e.g., by employing protected physical 
distribution systems) to ensure that FTI is not accessible to unauthorized 
users. The agency must ensure that all network infrastructure, access points, 
wiring, conduits, and cabling are within the control of authorized agency 
personnel. Network monitoring capabilities must be implemented to detect and 
monitor for suspicious network traffic. For physical security protections of 
transmission medium, see Section 9.3.11.4, Access Control for Transmission 
Medium (PE-4).

This control applies to both internal and external networks and all types of 
information system components from which information can be transmitted (e.g., 
servers, mobile devices, notebook computers, printers, copiers, scanners, fax 
machines).

Sent from my iPad

On Apr 2, 2015, at 2:15 PM, Hunt, Fred - DCF 
<fred.h...@wisconsin.gov<mailto:fred.h...@wisconsin.gov>> wrote:

Does anyone have previous experience meeting IRS requirements for the encrypted 
transmission of FTI across a LAN and WAN, specifically the requirements called 
for in IRS Publication 1075?
The IRS tests for the following:
All FTI data in transit is encrypted when moving across a Wide Area Network 
(WAN) and within the agency's Local Area Network (LAN).   If FTI is transmitted 
over a LAN or WAN it is encrypted with FIPS 140-2 validated encryption, using 
at least a 128-bit encryption key.

MACsec is what we are looking at right now.  I'm wondering if anyone who has 
been through such an implementation could share lessons learned, gotchas, etc.

Any input is appreciated?

Fred

Reply via email to