Enterprises need to focus on data, enterprise culture
The explosion of cloud-based services and personal devices is taking its toll on enterprise security strategy.
By George V. Hulme
October 14, 2011 — CSO —
It's no secret that enterprise users are bringing more types of IT devices to work -- devices not necessarily condoned or managed by IT -- while they're also using more cloud-based services to store, manage and share their work related files.
In short, IT's already tenuous grip on how workers access enterprise data is rapidly losing more of its hold.
Georgia Tech's annual Cyber Security Summit, held Oct. 11, 2011, where security experts from industry, academia, and government discussed some of the more pressing IT security challenges, found the mobile threats and the ability to control data shared online among the highest risks.
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The Georgia Tech Cyber Security Summit 2012 report is available here for download.
Also, earlier this summer, the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth held a Human Behavior and Security Culture workshop, with the paper published last week and made available here. The workshop included security leaders from Automatic Data Processing, Inc., Bechtel, Cigna, Cisco, Colgate-Palmolive, Eastman Chemical Company, eBay, General Dynamics, Goldman Sachs, L.L. Bean, the MITRE Corporation, Providence Health & Services, Praxair, Staples, Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Stream Global Services, Time Inc., and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Those who attended discussed how technology and regulatory compliance mandates alone are not sufficient to manage risk. Here are some of the insights found:
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