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Pete Finnigan's Oracle Security Weblog

This is the weblog for Pete Finnigan. Pete works in the area of Oracle security and he specialises in auditing Oracle databases for security issues. This weblog is aimed squarely at those interested in the security of their Oracle databases.

What Should you do if your Oracle Database is Hacked or Breached?

It has been a while since my last blog post as we have been incredibly busy here with customers work, new versions of our products and from a personal point of view moving house.

I just got an email from the UKOUG that one of my talks has been accepted for the conference in the East Side Rooms in Birmingham in December. I will be speaking about what to do if your Oracle database is breached or more importantly what not to do. If you are hacked then how do you deal with it. How would you investigate the breach and how would you prove what the issues were that let the attackers in in the first place. If you would like to hear more then please come along the UKOUG conference in Birmingham this December.

I have not forgotten about the blog series I talked about here a few times over the last months about how to write a language interpreter in PL/SQL and embed it into your PL/SQL applications. There is a new page on the website that links to articles written so far about writing a language interpreter or compiler for embedding in PL/SQL. There are links to the articles already published and a set of links to the new articles that will be published over the coming months.

Please have a look at the articles already written and watch out for the new ones coming soon.

We have also been working on the new version of our products that can be used to help customer secure data in their Oracle databases. The product suite has had so far around 3,500 updates and changes to it. This includes over 730 new database security checks and around 300 new PL/SQL secure code checks. We will be releasing version 4 very soon to existing customers. Ask us to demo any or our products to you; we will be very happy to do that over webex. We have PFCLScan that can be used to perform a security audit of an Oracle database; we have PFCLCode that can be used to audit PL/SQL code for security issues including things like SQL Injection; we have PFCLObfuscate that can be used to protect your PL/SQL code by obfuscating it to remove meaning and understanding and also to allow licensing to be added to your PL/SQL; we also have PFCLForensics that can be used to help manage a breach and also to help collect data and investigate how the database was breached; We also have PFCLCookie that can be used to audit a website for cookies to help with GDPR.

All of our products are built on the core product PFCLScan to use its core features and processing. If you are interested in any of these products then send me a message and I will be happy to arrange a live demo on line for you

To illustrate the power of the core engines and functionality to be able to do anything at all that could be run from a command prompt, on Unix or in SQL then we also developed some simple tools that are currently run as plugins in the main PFCLScan product. The first of these is a website broken link checker that scans a website and finds broken links and where these links are located. We have used commercial link checkers and some free ones in the past; this finds more broken links.

We are also working on our own website SEO and trying to improve traffic and positioning in Google. More on this soon

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