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Smartphone wave challenges enterprise security

Smartphone wave challenges enterprise security

By:  Ellen Messmer  On: 06 Aug 2010 For: Network World (U.S.) Creator

It's a devil's bargain, says one industry analyst of user demands for devices mainly aimed at consumers, and there isn't one solution

FRAMINGHAM, Mass. -- With ever more employees clamoring to use smartphones for both personal and business purposes, IT and security managers are forced to answer tough questions:

First, will there be sanctioned enterprise adoption of Apple's iPhone -- not to the mention the iPad -- as well as smartphones based on Google's Android operating system, if not even more varieties?

And, if employees want to use their own smartphone or iPad in business, will that be allowed?

Finally, how will the enterprise prepare to exert management and security controls in a multi-operating system smartphone environment, or figure out how to secure data on a device that the employee, not the enterprise, officially owns?

"It's coming," says Terrell Herzig, data security officer at UAB Health System, a hospital and medical research organization based in Birmingham, Ala. "The iPhones, the iPads, the Droid."

Herzig says medical professionals and staff just bring in the devices and expect to get onto clinical systems. They call the help desk, which reacts with bewilderment before calling the security team. And the demand is so mighty, UAB's CIO has set up a special task force to tackle the issue and figure out whether UAB, which already makes official use of the BlackBerry, should become a multi-smartphone environment, or approve use of personal devices.

"We're telling them hold off on buying these devices while we figure it out," Herzig says.

Just this week, UAB completed its security and configuration measures for the iPad, which will now be officially used with Good Technology's management and security application.

"The new generation of devices have the capability to do the things we want them to do," Herzig says. "A lot of people will want to remote desktop from the Droid, which is this week's big request."

The prospect of supporting management and security in a multi-operating system smartphone environment, or letting the employee use his or her own device instead of buying one for them, is now hotly debated among consultants and analysts.

"Most of the security can't scale to the number of devices the users will bring," says Kalani Silva, director of business transformation enablement at Presido Network Solutions in Greenbelt, Md. Silva believes trying to support multiple smartphone types in the enterprise will put demands on IT and security -- and add costs -- that just aren't worth it.

The BlackBerry, long established in the enterprise, can be reasonably controlled, Silva says, but that's not the case today with iPhone and the Android mobile devices. And allowing what's brought in as a consumer personal device to be used in business suggests there should be some way to securely partition it, which could be a practice in the future, but it's not today.

Other analysts acknowledge there are risks but it should be considered.

"It's a devil's bargain," says Andrew Borg, analyst at the Aberdeen consultancy. RIM's BlackBerry has long been the smartphone staple in the enterprise, and is marketed for that purpose. But the pressure is huge to allow in the stampede of ever-smarter smartphones that are mainly marketed for consumers.


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ellen messmer Ellen Messmer 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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