If there is such a thing as a security season, it reached its frenzied peak
this week. The UK has gone security mad and for the past month or so we have
been bombarded with research and theories.
We know, for example, that 25 per cent of organisations do not enforce
wireless security policies and that 64 per cent of office workers would be
willing to swap their passwords for a bar of chocolate.
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With such a furore in the IT industry it would be easy to believe that the
security message is universally understood, but facts and figures paint a
different picture. Security is still a massive problem and electronic crime is
increasing.
According to banking body Apacs, losses from online banking fraud leapt by 44
per cent from £23.2m in 2005 to £33.5m in 2006. And in the same period the
number of phishing attacks on banks rose from 1,714 to 14,156.
We are told online security is incredibly important and more needs to be done
to secure data and prevent attacks, yet the behaviour of influential bodies is
more relaxed.
Take Barclays Bank, for example. Last year it said it was going to issue all
of its online banking customers with two-factor authentication devices to reduce
phishing and card-not-present fraud. Last week, however, it said only a quarter
of those customers – about 500,000 people – will be issued with the devices.
If online crime was so serious six months ago that all customers were to be
issued with these devices, why has it become less so?
And then there are the law enforcers. Last year the National Hi-Tech Crime
Unit was disbanded, and earlier this month police forces handed over e-crime
reporting responsibilities to Apacs.
The message is muddled. Online security must be treated with the same regard
as physical security. If the police handed responsibility for burglary reporting
to an alarm manufacturers’ body there would be outcry.
If official bodies are not going to lead the way, responsibility falls on the
IT and business communities. When two thirds of people are dumb enough to swap
passwords for sweets, a lot more work needs to be done.
Businesses need to work harder to enforce the point that security companies
need to get back to basics on defining their message if we are to make any
headway in combating online crime.
What do you think? Email us at: feedback@computing.co.uk
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