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September 24, 2008

New version of PC Activity Monitor Pro (PC Acme Pro) added!

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October 10, 2008

Parity provides free online identity management

High-tech bank robbers phone it in

Spread security risks with diversity

Corporate data loss not down to hackers

First quantum encrypted network goes live

Apple Posts Security Update 2008-007

NT hacker blames 'segregation'

ASIC counter-spy to be a tough search

Scotland tightens security for mobile health-data

Home Office publishes data-sharing guidance

EDS loses unencrypted armed-forces data

Data-center security tools to not overlook

Microsoft promises huge patch day next week

Firefox add-on blocks 'clickjacking' attacks

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DISCLAIMER: Logging other people's keystrokes or breaking into other people's computer without their permission can be considered illegal by the courts of many countries. The monitoring software reviewed here is ONLY for authorized system administrators and/or owners of computers. We assume no liability and are not responsible for any misuse or damage caused by the keylogging software. The end user of this software is obliged to obey all applicable local, state, federal and other laws in his country of residence.

July 03, 2008

Information Security Management: The Basics

It's one thing to establish a security program that meets the needs of your organization. It's quite another to successfully embed the principles of that program into the very DNA of your organization.

However, it can be accomplished if you take a multi-faceted approach that incorporates organizational, managerial and operational aspects that are closely associated with the business.

This approach can be condensed into three major areas: assessment, implementation and monitor/measurement. Here is an exploration of these three areas:

1. Assessment
Corporate culture.The first thing to assess is the culture of your organization. Few things are more frustrating than trying to fit a square peg into a round hole. Thus, it's important to know where you stand, from an organizational perspective, before launching an initiative with as potentially high impact as a security program. After all, security is a change agent, and people by nature are not conducive to change. Making matters even more challenging, security professionals typically work in resource-constrained environments, in which they have little authority.

When you work within the confines of your organization's culture and align the security program with the cultural reality of your organization, you can gain a key leadership edge. It's essential for the security professional to adapt the look and feel of the local practice.

Business alignment. In order to provide value from a security perspective, it's essential to work very closely with the business, understand the business's needs and be able to fully articulate the business value of the security program. Indeed, business alignment is the only way to gain the cooperation and buy-in from your business constituents that's critical to the success of the security program. Unless you truly understand the business, you can't accurately and forcefully strategize, deploy and communicate the value of the security function.

Management commitment. Depending on the maturity of the security program in your organization, you may require anything from a few tweaks to a full implementation of substantial controls, implying significant budget considerations. Therefore, it's imperative to have executive management sponsorship and line management buy-in. Security professionals must make themselves visible and known to business management, especially business leaders who will be most involved with the program or feel the effects of it the most. It's a symbiotic relationship that pays off in the end.

In fact, collaborating with other functions within the organization is essential to the success not only of the security professional but also of the business. The most important business areas to align with include compliance, governance, business continuity, operational risk and audit. Information security is interdependent on all of these areas. One way to build functional commitment and collaboration is through security councils.

Risks. Information security governance is operational risk management. Indeed, implementing an information security governance program starts with enterprise management identifying the full scope and extent of the real risks that the enterprise is up against and creating processes for managing those risks.

It's important to understand that risk assessment is not an exact science; it simply makes it possible to decide which risks to mitigate, which to assign and which to accept.

We must keep in mind, though, that operational security risks are just some of the many issues on the CEO's mind, making it imperative to put security risk into the perspective of overall risk. In order to do this well, you need a methodology for assessing and prioritizing security risk. This methodology need not be complex or quantitative. It does, however, have to be consistent, repeatable and agreed upon by all players.

2. Implementation
Hire a qualified professional. The best-qualified professional is one that can display a particular set of competencies and skills. Above all, effective security leadership requires leadership skills and business knowledge. In the end, security leaders are good business leaders.

Hew to business drivers. It can't be said enough that business and security must be aligned and that successful security functions are driven by business requirements. Anyone who institutionalizes a security program that is focused on business drivers can rest assured that they've built their program on a strong foundation.

Develop and sell a strategy. One way to get people frustrated and impede security from gaining momentum is to launch a bunch of "one-off" security projects, without purpose or direction. Success comes from developing, implementing and selling a strategy for risk management using the results of a thorough risk assessment.

A concentrated focus on mitigating risks deemed as top priorities should be the center point of the strategy. Strategy development should encompass eight key steps: identifying and prioritizing threats; identifying weaknesses; tailoring the strategy to your company's risk profile; establishing ownership in the plan; implementing realistic timeframes; considering small, phased steps; reviewing the strategy against industry-accepted standards; and demonstrating and measuring progress.

If the business understands that security can help, the sell is not as difficult. Thankfully, businesses are becoming more aware of threats to sensitive corporate information, and they are engaging security officers in their quest to secure it.

Policy, standards and processes. These are the three tenets around which an effective security program is founded. It's incumbent on the organization to help personnel make the right decisions by providing formally documented guidelines and policies that are also clear and concise.

As important as policies are, however, they are only as good as their relevance to the management of operational risk. Strong security programs don't implement specific controls because it is policy; rather, they implement the control because it is the direction of the executive team. The policy serves as the method of communicating that message.

3. Monitor/measurement

Measure effectiveness. Security policies are not worth the paper they're written on unless they are enforced. Policy enforcement requires that everyone in the company knows the requirements and understands their role in complying with those requirements. In addition, compliance must be routinely monitored, and non-compliance must result in corrective action. Simply put, there's no reasonable assurance of the effectiveness of security and controls unless they are monitored and measured.

Establishing a security program that meets the needs of your organization is a daunting but doable task. By following a structured approach that involves assessment, implementation and monitoring - and builds on a foundation of business-oriented organizational, operational and managerial concerns - any enterprise will have the tools it needs to succeed.


Source: CSO Online




All news for October 10, 2008:
13:57Parity provides free online identity management
13:56High-tech bank robbers phone it in
13:56Spread security risks with diversity
13:54Corporate data loss not down to hackers
13:53First quantum encrypted network goes live
13:51Apple Posts Security Update 2008-007
13:50NT hacker blames 'segregation'
13:49ASIC counter-spy to be a tough search
13:48Scotland tightens security for mobile health-data
13:47Home Office publishes data-sharing guidance
13:47EDS loses unencrypted armed-forces data
13:45Data-center security tools to not overlook
13:44Microsoft promises huge patch day next week
13:43Firefox add-on blocks 'clickjacking' attacks

All news for October 09, 2008:
13:44Job losses on the way for IT security staff
13:43FSA threatens executives with fines
13:39Anatomy of a SQL Injection Attack
13:37Why Security Pros Hate SharePoint
13:36Remote Workers Care About IT Security -- Really
13:35US gov't report: Data mining is ineffective
13:34Shell warns employees of suspected data loss
13:32'Fast-flux' domains help botnets evade capture
12:46Mozilla locks in Firefox 3.1 feature list
12:45Colorado state Web site dishes out SSNs of CEOs, other top execs
12:43Kernell pleads innocent to Palin hack charge
12:42Symantec to buy e-mail security vendor MessageLabs
12:41Privacy groups praise bill curbing warrantless laptop searches
12:40Tenn. student indicted for hacking Palin's e-mail



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