Blogger: Eric Maiwald
Yesterday, Rapid7 announced the acquisition of Metasploit. Two other examples of an open source project being transformed into a commercial enterprise in the area of vulnerabilities, exploits, and detection signatures (all of them are closely related) come to mind – the other two that I’m thinking of Nessus/Tenable and Snort/Sourcefire. The model seems makes sense for technologies around security vulnerabilities.
In all three cases, a technology was created and a community was formed (worldwide in all three cases). The community contributed their knowledge to the project. While some of this knowledge went to the development of the software, much more went into the development of the vulnerability (or signature or exploit) libraries. Beyond the initial creation of the libraries, the community continued to contribute. Thousands of people (perhaps even larger but I don’t think anyone really knows) were continually on the lookout for security vulnerabilities or new exploits. These same people then either notified the community about the issue or they created a vulnerability check, signature, or exploit and contributed it to the project. For the commercialized products, there still must be a QA/QC testing process to make sure the check/exploit/signatures works and does not cause problems when it is deployed.
Now compare that model to a really smart person (or team of people) that starts a commercial company in this same area. In order to get things going, the team must build the software and do all of the research needed to create the vulnerability checks, signatures, or exploits. That is a lot of work and given the number of products already on the market, there is a lot of catch up to do. Once the initial work has been done, the company will need to maintain an expert research team to keep creating the vulnerability checks, signatures, or exploits. The really good teams are not small – they will need people with expertise in a number of different areas – and they are not cheap. An interesting point is that many teams maintain contact with the open source communities and trade information. There are certainly examples of companies that have successfully created a product and maintained a world class team. However, there are also examples of companies trying to get started and failing.
It is hard to beat a large community when it comes to identifying potential problems (even if additional help is needed to commercialize what has been identified) so perhaps the area of vulnerabilities, exploits, and signatures is well served by the open source model. What do you think?
