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Director, security and software research, IDC Canada

Director, security and software research, IDC Canada

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 03 Jul 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A vendor warns adware is the most prevalent type malware targeted at corporations and an IDC analyst says users are often to blame. The best solution is either acceptable use policies or integrated solutions, depending whom you ask.

Education is a key preventative measure for corporate environments, an opinion backed by both Senf and Manky. “IT managers should really emphasize awareness and education to their employees,” said Manky. “You can have a lot of security solutions in place, but it’s a chain really. If there is one user who is not aware…then the entire corporation, their sensitive data…intellectual property…can be at risk.”

“We see that organizations tend to purchase the wrong technologies or do not emphasize enough the right technologies,” said Senf. “If you have a Trojan on your machine that’s got the keystroke logger and it’s snagging your banking information or your corporate login information…that can be bad. But users typically have to do something to get one of these. So a lot of this comes down to organizations taking employees aside, training them properly.”

According to Senf, “An organization needs to take a holistic approach to security and look at what are the myriad threats that can harm them, not just focusing on the latest, greatest. Organizations focus on malware and they focus on spam and they focus on things that are possibly less damaging to their company than internal threats by employees, for example.”

Manky also suggested IT managers keep less frequent, but more damaging assaults in mind. “Spam, for example, is very frequent, but the overall damage of a single message of spam is not that great; whereas competitive espionage is less frequent, but could be very damaging,” said Manky. “Similarly, employee malice….not as likely as spam is, for example, but again, the damage would be far greater to an organization.”

IT managers should also keep everything up to date. “There’s a lot of attacks that try to gain access to the corporate environment through a front end, such as SQL injection attacks,” reminded Manky. “So it’s always good to have proper coding practices in place and software patches.”










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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.

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