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Symantec: User Ignorance begets internal threats

Symantec: User Ignorance begets internal threats

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 27 Aug 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

As monitoring tools become more prevalent, companies are getting a better idea of how much sensitive data is being compromised, and insecure e-mail is a major culprit. Why a toilet paper manufacturer should be concerned about data loss

Most security threats come from inside organizations, but many violators don’t even realize they were doing something wrong, according to speakers at a panel discussion on data loss prevention.

In a recent user survey conducted by IDC, 56 per cent of respondents said e-mail was a source of confidential e-mail links.

Brian Burke, IDC’s program director for security products, presented the survey results during a Webcast Thursday, dubbed Back to School for DLP Education, hosted by Symantec Corp. of Cupertino, Calif.

More than a third of respondents identified Web mail or posts to Web sites as sources of breaches, while 19 per cent cited iPods and other devices that plug into USB ports.

“Three or four years ago companies simply did not know, didn’t have visibility to the fact that employees were committing these errors,” Burke said. “The fact that they’re actually aware of it now and they see it as a major driver signifies a major shift in the level of knowledge out there that this insider threat really exists.”

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Web mail was also a concern for Sharp HealthCare, which operates seven hospitals in San Diego. The company’s technical security architect, Starla Rivers, said her organization has a total of 16,000 users, some of whom are doctors working for outside organizations and want to send patient data to Google Docs.

“We’re concerned about patient data going across an HTTP connection, it’s not even an HTTPS connection - and getting posted to Google, out of our control.”

Rivers said another major concern is the prevalence of U.S. social security numbers used on patient records.

“We have widespread use of social security numbers throughout the health care industry,” Rivers said, adding her company also gets confidential information about employees from firms over e-mail.

“The employers are often small, they don’t have the compliance background that we have and they don’t have the tools in place to send data securely, or they don’t use the ones they have,” she said.

Transmitting confidential information over the Web is also an issue for First Advantage Corp., a Poway, Calif. firm whose services include background checks on prospective employees, including including court records, employment history, liens and judgements.

“The biggest challenge we have is our company is we process a lot of personally identifiable information, whether it’s background checks, credit checks or drug testing for large employers,” said Kam Golpariani, First Advantage’s vice-president for security risk management. “We do everything we can to protect our customers data and we have to consider every type of device or system or exit point within our environment to have a good grasp on it overall.”


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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Comments (2)

CISO
by Paul 8/29/2008 12:00:00 AMThat's why the detection engine is the most important function of any DLP solution. This engine must have a ZERO False Positive and ZERO False Negative rate. The only solution which has this accuracy is GTB Technologies
RE: CISO
by James Desato 9/5/2008 12:00:00 AMWe just had a huge data loss incident when one of our VP's sent by mistake an SMS with contacts/confidential information in it. Does anybody know of a Blackberry s/w that would catch this type of message before it goes out?
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