R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

CEOs urged to make infosecurity a priority

New report warns business leaders of security threats

Phil Muncaster, IT Week 13 Dec 2007
ADVERTISEMENT

Chief executives and directors were this week urged to make information security one of their top priorities and do more to engage with their IT departments, as yet another report predicted more serious threats for 2008.

The call came from business leader organisation the British-North American Committee (BNAC), which released a new document outlining the steps chief executives should be taking.

Cyber Attack: A Risk Management Primer for CEOs and Directors recommended senior decision makers establish comprehensive information security policies, and also that they keep abreast of changes in security technology and best practices themselves.

"Too often CEOs and directors fail to understand the level of potential risk and liability, and cede responsibility for dealing with cyber attacks to their IT department," the report said. "Instead, leaders of corporations, nongovernmental and not-for-profit organisations, and public sector agencies in the 21st century must know enough to at least ask the right questions of their chief information officer."

It warned that many chief executives fail to appreciate the scale of the problem, recognise the consequences of a security breach on the business, or understand that problems with the security systems of third parties may impact their organisation.

"Much work is needed to increase the security of the internet and its connected computers and to make the environment more reliable for everyone," warned former Icann president Vint Cerf in the report. "Security is a mesh of actions and features and mechanisms. No one thing makes you secure."

In related news, a new report by managed security service provider ScanSafe released this week warned IT security chiefs to be on their guard against more attacks on their web sites.

Techniques such as hiding malware in online advertising will continue next year, as hackers look to infect consumers' PCs with Trojans, it claimed.

"A large number of these sites are heavily reliant on Web 2.0 technology, but because there has been a huge explosion in the number of sites, there is tremendous demand for web developers," explained the firm's senior security researcher, Mary Landesman. "Many sites are being developed by people who aren't security savvy and there's a reliance on third party applications which may have vulnerabilites."

ScanSafe also warned that the risk of data leakage through social networking sites will increase as employees deliberately or inadvertently discuss sensitive corporate information, or post inappropriate information.

See also:

New Symantec research finds that half of UK consumers want stronger legislation  12 Dec 2007
New research from Ernst & Young finds many security teams are still struggling to integrate with the business  10 Dec 2007
moneyInvestigation finds bank accounts for sale on internet  04 Dec 2007
spam photoUnwanted emails are now more liikely to carry malware threats, says IronPort  03 Dec 2007
Steady progress is being made by ISPs on spam and email security according to new research  28 Nov 2007
phishing logoAccording to a new survey consumers lose faith in brands that have been phished  27 Nov 2007

All Enterprise Security Technology

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Aston Carter
Java, J2EE, Developer, Spring, Hibernate, London, city, Graduate. This is an amazing opportunity to join a successful city based team working at the cutting edge of development. My client is looking for strong Java/J2EE developers ... more >
| Aston Carter
E-Commerce, Greenfield, Agile, Java, J2EE, , JavaScript, SQL, London, City Graduate This is an exceptional opportunity for a talented Java, J2EE developer keen to work in a successful development team within arguable the best agile ... more >
| Rullion Computer Personnel Ltd
2nd Line Support Analyst London £35, 000 to £40, 500 My client is a global market leader in the Internet Applications Industry. The company is continually progressing and looking for areas of growth and this ... more >
| Rullion Computer Personnel Ltd
Security Architect / Information Security Specialist – St Albans - Global Leader - Shine At The Highest Level Security Solution Architect / Information Security Architect required by renowned blue-chip organisation offering the finest security projects ... more >
More job opportunities