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Software designed to prevent identity theft

Software designed to prevent identity theft

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 13 Feb 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Identity Finder works by searching systems for cookies, IM logs and other files for confidential personal information. An analyst says it may not be enterprise class but does help plug some holes

It’s necessary that security measures be holistic, encompassing software, process and behaviour, said Carmi Levy, senior vice-president of strategic consulting for Toronto-based AR Communications Inc. “It’s one thing to implement the tool, it’s a quite another to make sure all employees at all levels of the organization understand all the threats that expose the organization to unnecessary risk.”

Identity theft is that “big breach right now”, said Levy, adding that companies should indeed consider the risks of P2P applications. However, he noted that threats have merely morphed over time: a decade ago, the same dialogue centred on instant messaging, and later it became about Web 2.0-based applications. “At any given time in the history of the IT department, there will always be a new technology that raises fears.”

Levy ventured to add that at the very least, IT departments would consider Identity Finder as an addition to its security arsenal.

However, he cautioned the software is a “fairly small utility type application”, and not an enterprise-class solution considering its origins as shareware. Although the tool doesn’t have the scalability of Norton-based software, he added “it certainly does plug some holes at the desktop level that enterprises up till now have not been able to plug on their own”.

Given industry interest in combating identity theft, Levy is encouraged by the software’s entrance into the enterprise sphere nine months ago, following a lengthy presence in the consumer space. If anything, he added, the new market entrant raises awareness around identity theft and raises the issue’s level of importance to that given to virus and spyware protection.

But because prevention of identity theft is very much a behavioural issue, Levy said the danger is that a short-sighted IT manager might believe this software alone has covered all the business’ security bases.

Licenses for Identity Finder are based on the number of employees. According to Feinman, the tool has the scalability to support both small and large-sized businesses, adding that it has been “rolled out to tens of thousands of machines.”










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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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