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Lead analyst, The Stategic Counsel

Lead analyst, The Stategic Counsel

By:  Rosie Lombardi  On: 23 Feb 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

A recent survey of the Canadian enterprise security landscape offers good news and bad news. The bad news is that security attacks on large Canadian organizations have grown significantly – to 82 per cent, up from 67 per cent three years ago. The good news? The ability of enterprises to understand, detect and counteract attacks is also increasing.

As a result, a fourth 'A' – audit – has now joined the previous security trinity of authentication, authorization and access control, said Roberta Witty, vice-president of the information security and privacy group at Gartner, Inc. based in Stamford, Conn.

Witty outlined Gartner's eight-step IAM audit and compliance process, and the underlying business and technology drivers associated with the steps. She said a full implementation is lengthy, and could require up to five years, as major changes in business processes and IT infrastructure are required. But don't try to boil the ocean, she cautioned: a phased-in approach works best.

Witty also noted that organizational and political issues could comprise up to 80 per cent of an IAM project's efforts, and that the remaining 20 per cent devoted to technology are less problematic. For example, in role-based identity management, people's true roles rarely map back tidily to formal descriptions in HR systems. Many employees wear many hats, she said, and people with nebulous positions such as 'project manager' and 'HR specialist' might require access rights not reflected in formal job descriptions.

Some of these issues were picked up later in a general panel discussion of IAM implementation issues. Tom Moss, vice-president of technology at BSSI, said companies should not underestimate the amount of data involved in an IAM project. In some companies, some data cleansing was required first before they could proceed, as there was no ultimate, authoritative data within their systems that accurately reflected their employees' roles.

Rosa Caputo, managing director at KeyData Associates, a Toronto-based consultancy specializing in IT security, also echoed this concern. Companies can go beyond compliance by implementing an IT governance structure. Instead of reacting to particular regulatory requirement, companies can implement a governance infrastructure once and reap the benefits repeatedly, thus creating the conditions for sustainable compliance in the long-term.

A bit of good-natured American-Canadian banter ensued when Witty noted the threshold for a company to consider automating security and implementing massive IAM tools was about 3000 employees. But Shiau pointed out that in Canada's business environment, the threshold was closer to 1500 employees, based on feedback provided by survey respondents deploying an IAM.










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Rosie Lombardi Rosie Lombardi 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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