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Business leaders overvalue data encryption: Study

Business leaders overvalue data encryption: Study

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 10 Mar 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The gap between business and IT is still very wide when it comes to the realities of data security awareness, according to a new report. Find out why business managers are actually overrating data encryption

 

Senf said that while encryption is an important and necessary tool to enterprise security, it’s absolutely not a complete defence strategy.

 

“You could call up one of these business managers, pretend you’re their IT department, get the password, and lo and behold, you now have access to their encrypted data,” he said. “Moreover, you could send an attachment to them that contains a keystroke logger and get the password that way. You would also get other information before it gets encrypted on the drive.”

 

Of course, IT managers who wants to drive their point home about the dangers of relying solely on encryption should avoid both of these methods if they want to stay out of trouble with the law and keep their jobs.

 

Instead, Senf said, IT leaders should focus on trying to educate business managers, with simple and easy-to-understand examples of the dangers of relying solely on encryption. This means that IT managers must also become marketers, trying to influence their business colleagues on security tactics, without going overboard and desensitizing them.

 

He added that it’s especially important to educate employees as they come into the organization, because it’s often difficult to change an employee’s habits once they are settled in.

 

Spinney pointed to effective awareness programs about workplace safety and sexual harassment as examples that could also be translated to IT security. Employees need to be aware of the consequences to themselves and their company if they turn off their encryption measures, he added.










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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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