Leading security technologists have warned that criminals' ability to
innovate is threatening to outstrip firms' efforts to secure their enterprise.
This bleak prognosis is based on the rapid adoption of new working practices
and technologies – many of which will have unforeseen security implications –
and the difference between the pace that new security threats emerge and the
time it takes organisations to respond.
From a purely technological perspective it is almost possible to admire the
ways attackers are creating tools and using modern enterprise IT infrastructure
to propagate their attacks, said Dan Hubbard, vice president of security
research at Websense. They are evolving "
at a faster pace" than the security industry, he said. "They haven't got
business processes holding them back; they're free to innovate."
That pace of innovation is challenging organisations' ability to teach staff
to behave securely, warned Mark Bregman, chief technology officer, Symantec.
There is a limit to how quickly employees can take on board new secure working
practices, he suggested. Many enterprises are finding they are "about at that
limit now", he added.
And as the pressure to deliver a more business-responsive IT infrastructure
intensifies, the level of risk businesses are introducing is accelerating, said
Bob Gliechauf, vice president of enterprise security and services at Cisco.
Two of the greatest threats are posed by virtualisation and cloud computing.
Server virtualisation has become a mainstream technology, helping to squeeze
more value from existing IT assets. But simultaneously it is introducing new
risks that are not fully appreciated.
It is much like the days when firewalls were first introduced in to the
enterprise, suggested Gliechauf. The firewalls were set up by IT to lockdown the
network; as business users complained that this prevented them doing their jo
bs, those controls were weakened, and then the firewalls were rebuilt
iteratively, to balance risk and control. "With virtualisation we're becoming
blind again," he said.
Cloud computing presents similar risks, said Websense's Hubbard. Services
such as Amazon's S3 and EC2 let users establish virtual machines, capable of
running an entire operating system and potentially involving all manner of
enterprise data streaming out of the organisation, while all IT would see is web
traffic. "That's pretty frightening," said Hubbard.
But Symantec's Bregman cautioned users about getting too downbeat. "It can
often feel like we're falling further behind," he noted. "But new technology
presents opportunities as well as threats."
For example, Bregman suggested that virtualisation technology might actually
provide a mechanism that allows organisations to secure end-points. With firms
increasingly open to the notion that users might want to connect any device of
their choice to the corporate network, it would be possible to deliver a locked
down virtual machine to run on those devices, rather than adopting the
traditional approach of only supporting specific images on designated clients.
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