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Camera phones are a security risk: Meta Group

Posted on December 10, 2003December 30, 2021 by admini

However, it warned that for many organisations cameras represent a significant liability or security risk and listed dangers such as such as inappropriate candid shots of employees and pictures of production lines.

“Most organisations that provide phones to their employees and that are evaluating new, feature-rich mobile phones should require the vendor or carrier/supplier to permanently disable the camera or provide a device without a camera,” said Jack Gold, vice president with Meta Group’s Technology Research Services division.

More info: [url=http://www.electricnews.net/frontpage/news-9384314.html]http://www.electricnews.net/frontpage/news-9384314.html[/url]

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Vulnerability Management: Processes Strengthen IT’s Security Performance

Posted on December 10, 2003December 30, 2021 by admini

Vulnerability management services (VMSs) have arisen from the pragmatic need to make existing security technologies work together to mitigate today’s network securicyty vulnerabilities while the security product vendors develop new technologies.

Enterprise security teams are overwhelmed with the volume of information from intrusion detection systems (IDSs) and patch notifications from vendors. There are significant challenges in identifying vulnerabilities in their network infrastructure and in tuning network security products for optimal efficiency and protection.

Security teams that once reacted to security incidents now are proactively addressing network security through the life cycle of vulnerability intelligence all the way to confirmation of a deployed correction.

Managed security service providers are evolving service product lines from managing security technology, such as managed firewall and managed IDS services, to the higher value service of managing the process across technologies to secure the extended enterprise.

Enterprises will consolidate managed services with a single preferred vendor to capture enterprise experience, simplify escalation procedures across multiple security products and streamline contract negotiations.

Smaller VMS organizations will be forced to extend expert services to new areas of a security policy, such as identity management services, remote connectivity assessment services and wireless security services. The Yankee Group believes VMS vendors will consolidate throughout 2004, driven by the shortage of skilled security professionals.

More info: [url=http://www.csoonline.com/analyst/report2021.html]http://www.csoonline.com/analyst/report2021.html[/url]

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The Highs (and Lows) of the CSO

Posted on December 10, 2003December 30, 2021 by admini

It’s not an easy trek, becoming a security manager. But of all the possible security executive jobs out there, none is probably as challenging as the public-sector job.

The government CSO most likely has climbed his career mountain without a Sherpa or a harness to catch him if he falls. For starters, cultural and situational issues unique to government jobs make for a particularly tough journey for the government CSO. In the US Office of Management and Budget’s 2001 Government Information Security Reform Act report to Congress, for example, six IT security weaknesses in government were identified. They included a lack of attention to IT security by senior management and nonexistent IT security performance measures. In addition, the report cited poor security education and awareness, a lack of fully funded and integrated security, a failure to ensure that contractor services are adequately secure, and a problem with detecting, reporting and sharing information on vulnerabilities.

Although those weaknesses exist outside the public sector, they are exacerbated in government agencies where procedural problems and incompetent management can inflate them. Government security officers have less control than their civilian counterparts.

While industry executives are constrained by their budgets, government employees have to buy goods and services from a government-approved list, and they are bureaucratically hampered in their hiring. In the private sector, CSOs answer solely to the executive team. Public-sector CSOs have lists of executives they report to.

More info: [url=http://www.cio.com.au/index.php?id=1487268597&fp=16&fpid=0]http://www.cio.com.au/index.php?id=1487268597&fp=16&fpid=0[/url]

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New Wares Debuts At InfoSecurity

Posted on December 10, 2003December 30, 2021 by admini

At InfoSecurity 2003, a conference and expo targeting enterprise security that opened Monday in New York City and wraps up Thursday, a slew of security providers rolled out a solid slate of creative new wares.

Network Intelligence released the newest version of its security event management (SEM) software, enVision 2.001. The new software, which is integrated into Network Intelligence’s own line of security appliances, sports additional device support, improved analysis of security events — it can handle as many as 50,000 sustained events per second, according to Network Intelligence — and a new method of calculating the severity of events based on Homeland Security’s severity levels.

Cryptolog launched Unicity, a software-only solution that deploys digital certificates to end users based on ‘zero knowledge’ authentication and virtual smart cards.

Unicity uses the technique to issue digital certificates — used to authenticate users for financial transactions, to access protected documents, and to encrypt and sign e-mail messages — without the need for cumbersome hardware, said Cryptolog.

OpenService used InfoSecurity to unveil Security Threat Manager 2.0, the latest edition of its real-time threat assessor and security monitor.

New to STM 2.0 are improvements to its reporting skills — it now links detected threats to the lines of business they target, giving administrators a clearer picture of what’s actually under attack — topology visualizations that provide a graphical view of threat activity and allow IT staff to ‘drill down’ into the attack.

NeoScale Systems announced the impending release of CryptoStor for Tape 1.2, a high-speed tape protection appliance that compresses, encrypts, and digitally signs data as it’s recorded on physical or virtual tape libraries.

New to 1.2 is support for IBM Tivoli Storage Manager, adding to existing support for backup apps from Veritas, Legato, Hewlett-Packard, and Computer Associates.

Based on a client/server architecture, Global Command Center lets administrators access, share, and synchronize firewall configurations across the enterprise; create and enforce firewall and VPN policies; and monitor and control firewall activity from a central location.

More info: [url=http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB20031210S0005]http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB20031210S0005[/url]

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SCO hit again by DoS attack

Posted on December 10, 2003December 30, 2021 by admini

The attack began at 11:20am GMT Tuesday, shutting down the company’s main [url=http://www.sco.com]www.sco.com[/url] website, according to company spokesman Blake Stowell. SCO has raised the ire of the open-source community by claiming that the Linux operating system contains software that violates SCO’s intellectual property.

More info: [url=http://www.computerweekly.com/articles/article.asp?liArticleID=127156&liFlavourID=1&sp=1]http://www.computerweekly.com/articles/article.asp?liArticleID=127156&liFlavourID=1&sp=1[/url]

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The ABCs of Intellectual Property Protection

Posted on December 10, 2003December 30, 2021 by admini

Intellectual property (IP) can be anything from a particular manufacturing process to plans for a product launch, a chemical formula or a list of the countries in which your patents are registered. It may help to think of it as intangible proprietary information.

The formal definition, according to the World Intellectual Property Organization is creations of the mind – inventions, literary and artistic works, symbols, names, images, and designs used in commerce. IP includes but is not limited to proprietary formulas and ideas, inventions (products and processes), industrial designs, and geographic indications of source, as well as literary and artistic works such as novels, films, music, architectural designs and web pages.

Authoritative sources report that each year, intellectual property theft costs U.S. companies about $300 billion.

To protect the secret, a business must prove that it adds value to the company – that it is, in fact, a secret – and that appropriate measures have been taken within the company to safeguard the secret, such as restricting knowledge to a select handful of executives.

In some ways, trade secrets are easy to protect. Stealing them is illegal under the 1996 Economic Espionage Act. Employees usually know that they’re valuable, and nondisclosure agreements may protect your company further.

What’s more complicated is helping employees understand how seemingly innocuous details can be strung together into a bigger picture-, and how a simple company phone list becomes a weapon in the hands of snoops.

Espionage is sometimes sanctioned – or even carried out – by foreign governments, which may view helping local companies keep tabs on foreign rivals as a way to boost the country’s economy. Executives traveling to Pakistan, for example, might need to register under pseudonyms, have their hotel rooms or work spaces swept for bugs, or even have security guards help protect information. Over the years, France, China, Latin America and the former Soviet Union have all developed reputations as places where industrial espionage is widely accepted, even encouraged, as a way of promoting the country’s economy. A good resource for evaluating the threat of doing business in different parts of the world is the Corruption Perceptions Index published each year by Transparency International (and made famous by The Economist).

India is another country of increasing importance to American businesses because of the rapid rise of offshore outsourcing. The prevalence of outsourcing of IT functions introduces some vulnerabilities to companies that may not think of themselves as having a global presence. In legal terms, the most pertinent global standard is the World Trade Organization’s intellectual property add-on, TRIPS (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights). But TRIPS protections still must be enforced locally, and none of the countries prominent in software outsourcing, including India, have local laws covering theft of trade secrets. Experts say India’s culture is generally more IP-friendly, but the legal status of intellectual property in India is in a state of flux.

Protect important information, such as source code, with passwords and access codes, and make sure that these are not widely available, either in the United States or at the outsourcing location. Look for employee retention figures, find out if competitors do business with the same companies, and if so, ensure that there is no contact between teams.

Regulated industries such as health care and financial services need to keep closer controls over data and software development than, say, packaged goods companies.

Companies that don’t have the resources to take these steps should think twice about what they are putting at risk by offshoring, whether it’s software development or some other function like call centers involving sensitive customer data.

More info: [url=http://www.csoonline.com/fundamentals/abc_ip.html]http://www.csoonline.com/fundamentals/abc_ip.html[/url]

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