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IBM System i computers security risk, says study

IBM System i computers security risk, says study

By:  Jaikumar Vijayan  On: 31 Oct 2006 For: Computerworld (US online) Creator

IBM's System i computers -- formerly known as the AS/400 and iSeries servers -- have long enjoyed a reputation for rock-solid reliability. But poor security practices by those who manage these systems are making them dangerously vulnerable to compromise, according to a recent study.

But that has changed with the support for services such as FTP and ODBC, which allow anyone with a profile on the system to access the database on a System i from a PC, he said. As a result, "it is very, very important that enterprises get a handle on the level of access that people have on these systems," Tatam said.

"Open access rights to the data and convenient tools to access the data from a PC make a troublesome combination," the PowerTech report noted. But few companies have put in place controls for limiting or monitoring this access, it said.

Much of the current attitude towards security on the System I has been shaped by user experiences of the past, said Al Barsa, president of Barsa Consulting Group LLC in Purchase, N.Y. "Keep in mind there are a lot of users who came from the S/38, which allowed you to be real sloppy with security," Barsa said. "It was a very simplistic computer to use" from a security standpoint, and early implementations often didn't even require passwords, he added.

"A lot of those practices carried over to the AS/400" and have persisted to this day, Barsa said. "Historically, this platform has been so robust that people have been able to get away with a lot of bad [security] practices."










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Jaikumar Vijayan Jaikumar Vijayan is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.
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