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Tips for securing mobile apps

Tips for securing mobile apps

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 20 Oct 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

IT managers at two government departments explain how 3G wireless networks are helping improve efficiency and how they are tackling the security problems. Info-Tech’s Mark Tauschek offers some advice for virtual private networking

The proliferation of third-generation cellular networks and Wi-Fi hotspots is helping mobile workers work on the road but one analyst notes administrators must provide virtual private networks for security.

About 200 Export Development Canada workers use HP 2710 tablets with wireless cards that allow them to use both the telcos’s 3G networks and Wi-Fi wireless local-area networks at coffee shops and hotels.

EDC is a federal crown corporation that provides financing, insurance, and other financial services for companies exporting to or operating in foreign countries. The organization has a contract with Bell Mobility to provide both wireless modems and Cisco Systems Inc.’s VPN Client, said David McNulty, EDC’s manager of telecommunications and desktop services.

The air card from Bell Mobility costs less than $100 per month, and McNulty estimates “potential savings” of $17 million over three years because EDC’s financial sales, risk management and insurance workers can be productive while outside of the office. The total cost of EDC’s mobility project was about $2 million.

EDC is also using Policy Manager and Mobility Client software from Montreal-based Trellia Inc., which is designed to connect over 802.11 networks, instead of carrier 3G networks, when an access point is available.

Although Bell Mobility gives EDC a flat rate for wireless in Canada, many EDC workers travel to places with roaming agreements. Outside of Canada, McNulty said, EDC is “discouraging the use of the air card and we’re encouraging the use of the Wi-Fi hot spots or hotels and so forth because of the roaming fees. A legal person that’s travelling could easily have a 50 MB file and if you’re familiar with roaming charges, that could get quite substantial.”

EDC uses the Cisco VPN Client because the organization holds potentially sensitive financial information.

“My recommendation would be that in any public wireless network, whether it be the carrier operated 3G network or the Wi-Fi network at Starbuck’s, that business users should connect to a corporate VPN to encrypt that traffic,” said Mark Tauschek, Senior Research analyst at the London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group. “Over the 3G or 2.5G network that data is actually pretty secure.”

But many 3G users also connect to Wi-Fi networks, said Giovanni Forte, Trellia’s CEO and co-founder.

“One can use 3G very securely and not necessarily need a VPN, but what we see is if a user is using 3G, typically they are very sophisticated,” Forte said. “He will most likely have Wi-Fi at home most likely would like to connect to Wi-Fi and knows how to do that at a coffee shop at a hotel room, et cetera. That opens up other security (issues) and that’s something IT needs to deal with.”


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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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