Many UK organisations are opening themselves up to security breaches as the
use of mobile working continues to take off, according to the latest
SafeNet
information security survey.
The number of organisations which support remote working for more than 50 per
cent of their employees has risen from 18 per cent in 2006 to 26 per cent in
2007.
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But the report also showed that 61 per cent of the 1,200 senior IT and
security professionals surveyed are still relying on passwords to protect their
corporate networks.
"An increase of eight per cent of the mobile workforce is significant as this
translates to hundreds of thousands of staff working outside the office
firewall," said Gary Clark, vice president of SafeNet EMEA.
"However, organisations trying to reap the benefits of mobile working without
implementing adequate security technology and processes to protect the network
are sitting on a security time bomb."
Alternative methods, such as two-factor authentication, have long been
considered more secure than password protection.
But just 15 per cent of survey respondents use tokens to secure remote access
for mobile workers, and only eight and three per cent respectively use
smartcards and/or biometric solutions.
"As organisations decentralise, the amount of sensitive business information
floating outside the firewall will rise. This poses significant security threats
for businesses, causing more stress for the IT director and senior management,"
said Clark.
"Mobile working and security do not have to be mutually exclusive or even a
trade-off. Organisations need to adapt their security measures to include more
flexible forms of working that allow authorised people in and keep unauthorised
people out."
The message does appear to be sinking in, however, as almost a third of
respondents admitted that unauthorised access to information systems by
outsiders is their primary security concern.
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