Device Networking's Silver Lining
Device networking will be a headache, but it may also bring the security group new prominence
By Fred Hapgood
April 01, 2004 — CSO — Device networking will leave no job unaffected, but not many jobs will be remade as drastically as security. Networked cameras and intercoms will allow CSOs to monitor and command security situations hundreds of miles away, directly and in real-time. Today, most corporate vehicles and their cargoes are unprotected once they leave the company lot: Network the vehicles' GPS navigators, match movements against a route and schedule table, and accidents and hijackings will all but announce themselves.
Every device on the premises will be available to advance the mission. Patterns of elevator use, lighting, heating and cooling will be a click away. Commandeering electronic floor displays or billboards, shutting down the escalators, or relaying an image of a shoplifter to every point-of-sale monitor in a store will be the work of a few seconds. A physical asset that finds itself being wheeled out the back door will be able to place a call to security, perhaps attaching a candid shot of the thieves. Combining output from distributed devices will make possible whole new categories of intelligence
But device networking may have a more profound benefit for the security group, putting it in the novel position of being fought over by other departments. Sales will be eager to use security cameras to observe patterns of shopper behavior on the display floor. Human resources can monitor vehicles of delivery truck drivers who keep getting lost (or stopping off at home for a quick nap). Facilities management can visually check offices or conference rooms. All these departments might be happy to trade contributions toward procurement and maintenance in return for influence over feature and location decisions.
Read more about network security in CSOonline's Network Security section.
Other stories by Fred Hapgood
More Salted Hash with Bill Brenner