Comment period closing soon for Secure Inter-Domain Routing Project Description

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NIST_logoDon’t miss your opportunity to comment on the latest National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (NCCoE) draft project description – Secure Inter-Domain Routing: Route Hijacks. The comment period closes this Thursday, June 29, 2017. We are seeking your feedback on this draft to help refine the challenge scope.

Download Secure Inter-Domain Routing Draft Project Description

The National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (NCCoE) at NIST recognizes the need to ensure safe and secure Internet traffic exchange. To address safe and secure internet traffic exchange, the NCCoE has launched part one of this project series: Secure Inter-Domain Routing: Route Hijacks. This project will use commercially available technologies to develop a cybersecurity reference design that can be implemented to increase security and functionality in Internet routing.

The Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) is the adopted default routing protocol of the Internet. BGP facilitates the exchange of routing information and determines feasible paths for data to flow from a source to a destination. Autonomous Systems (ASes) and Internet Service Providers (ISPs) collaborate with each other by exchanging route information using BGP to achieve interconnectivity. When the exchange of route information is inaccurate (either done maliciously or accidentally), traffic will either take inefficient paths through the internet, arrive at malicious sites that masquerade legitimate destinations, or never arrive to its intended destination.

This project will demonstrate how the implementation of BGP Route Origin Validation (ROV), using Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI), will address and resolve the erroneous exchange of network routes.

You can read the project description and provide feedback on the project; this comment period closes on June 29, 2017. This project will result in a publicly available NIST Cybersecurity Practice Guide, a detailed implementation guide of the practical steps required to implement a cybersecurity reference design that addresses this challenge.

We value and welcome your input. Please submit your comments on the Secure Inter-Domain Routing project description draft by Thursday, June 29, 2017.

Interested in joining our Community of Interest to guide this project as it moves forward? Send us an email at sidr-nccoe@nist.gov.

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