Technology Consulting for Small and Medium Business |
What Should Be Secured?
By Jack Safrit, President, Axxys
I recently attended an IT security conference in Chicago and the
keynote speaker's address reminded me that IT people and business
owners often have different views on what are your company's assets
and what constitutes adequate security. Dave Stelzl, author of The
House & the Cloud, simplified the security model for business by
comparing a business's security to a home. We “Protect” our home
with doors, windows, locks, and fences. However, we all know that
these security measures do little to stop a determined or skilled
burglar. The next ingredient is the ability to “Detect” a security
breach. In a home we put in alarm systems, motion detectors,
subscribe to monitoring services and support neighborhood crime
watch groups. Finally, the most important provision of the security
model is the “Response.” We have a dog that will bite the thief,
some people will have a gun ready for intruders, others rely on the
police to respond and others purchase insurance to replace lost
items and repair any damage.
Using the house as your business scenario you must ask three
questions.
1. What are you trying to protect?
2. What are the relevant threats you face?
3. How comfortable are you with your organizations ability to detect
and to respond to a security situation?
Your IT Department may do a great job of “Protecting” the physical
assets of your company and your network. However, threats today are
more likely to target the real assets of your business, the identity
information you have collected on your employees, customers, and
clients, intellectual assets you may possess, or links to outside
assets – bank accounts or credit card information. NBC recently ran
a news series and showed that a single personal identity with credit
card information could be sold via the internet for $5. TJ Maxx, the
retailer, reported a breach of over 40 million credit card accounts.
Multiply that number by $5 and do the math. Identity theft is big
business.
Who or what is at risk when your company is exposed to an
identity theft? The business itself, its owners, and principals are
all at risk. Even if the depth of the TJ Maxx exposure is not as
great as reported, can your company survive the bad press generated,
even if a retraction follows?
No one can guarantee 100% security. A firewall alone is no longer
adequate protection. Unified Threat Management Devices (UTM) are now
common and should be the basis for security protection. Written
company policies regarding the internet, email, and the use of
company information should be implemented and reinforced to every
employee. Threats are not just external. Disgruntled employees and
other internal attacks still account for a majority of the IT
security incidents.
So when you take a close look at your company and its valuable
assets ask the three questions above and see if you can live with
your answers.
