The operating system must prevent remote devices that have established a non-remote connection with the system from communicating outside of the communication path with resources in external networks.
An XCCDF Rule
Description
This control enhancement is implemented within the remote device (e.g., notebook/laptop computer) via configuration settings not configurable by the user of the device. An example of a non-remote communications path from a remote device is a virtual private network. When a non-remote connection is established using a virtual private network, the configuration settings prevent split-tunneling. Split-tunneling might otherwise be used by remote users to communicate with the information system as an extension of the system and to communicate with local resources, such as a printer or file server. The remote device, when connected by a non-remote connection, becomes an extension of the information system allowing dual communications paths, such as split-tunneling, in effect allowing unauthorized external connections into the system. This is a split-tunneling requirement that can be controlled via the operating system by disabling interfaces.
- ID
- SV-216366r959010_rule
- Version
- SOL-11.1-040490
- Severity
- Medium
- References
- Updated
Remediation Templates
A Manual Procedure
The root Role is required.
Remove net_access privilege from users who may be accessing the systems externally.
1. Create an RBAC Profile with net_access restriction