At the RSA security conference in San Francisco in April 2008, early adopters
of data loss prevention (DLP) technology argued that bad business processes are
the chief cause of information losses, bringing risks that far outweigh those
associated with malicious attacks.
DLP tools bring together data discovery, classification and policy management
products, allowing organisations to govern how important or sensitive
information is accessed and moved. The past year has seen a number of firms
specialising in this area being acquired by major security vendors such as
Websense and Symantec.
The introduction of DLP at credit agency Equifax proved to be a real eye-opener,
said Tony Spinelli, chief security and compliance officer at the firm.
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“It brought it home to us that people had no idea that we even had a data use
policy. The issues that arose were not about malicious activity, but about old,
bad business processes,” he told delegates.
In one case that was uncovered, the finance team would routinely reply to an
invoice submitted by a temporary staff agency. Because the agency had submitted
social security details in an unencrypted form, it had never occurred to the
finance team that by simply replying they too were sending out sensitive
information with inadequate controls, said Spinelli.
At Lincoln Financial Group, a trial of the technology also unearthed alarming
instances of previously unseen poor business practices. Pat Lefemine, chief
information security officer, explained that he had even discovered that his
chief executive’s home address and social security number had been sent out in
an unencrypted email. “After that, I didn’t have too much of a problem making
the business case,” he said.
But while DLP has helped these early adopters to minimise the risks of data
loss, its introduction requires careful planning, experts said.
If organisations are looking to implement best practice in handling data,
they need to get line-of-business leaders to buy into the process, warned Rhonda
MacLean, global chief information security officer at Barclays. The discussions
around data loss can get “emotional” she explained, and frequently business
managers choose to deny that poor practice could emanate from within their unit.
“You need the cold facts, figures and names to drive that point home,” she
added.
DLP potentially allows businesses to enforce a company-wide data usage
policy, said Equifax’s Spinelli, but it is vital to get your human resources and
legal teams to help construct that policy, so that any exemptions can be
properly managed.
So while DLP can help mitigate risks, IT leaders should be aware of the
overheads associated with it. MacLean explained it had made many business
leaders within Barclays aware of the need for greater use of encryption, but
that could potentially lead to higher charges for their IT services. As security
professionals “we need to think about how we can commoditise some of these
services. When business units buy desktop services, they automatically assume it
will be secure, so we need to think about how we can build encryption into the
prices we charge”, she said.
There may also be a technical overhead, suggested Spinelli, who added that
DLP tools can be “very CPU intensive”. Equifax monitors every piece of data
crossing its network and checks it against a 300 million-line database, used to
categorise sensitive data. This is done in 11 milliseconds by “throwing CPU
capacity” at the analysis.
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