Popular instant messaging and VoIP applications are leaving enterprises in
grave danger of running into financial and legal disaster, according to industry
experts.
Consumer applications such as
Windows
Live Messenger and
Skype often
skirt established network policies and protections, and unpatched security flaws
can leave networks vulnerable to attacks and data breaches.
These unauthorised network applications have been dubbed 'greynets' which,
while benevolent in function, could allow a network to be compromised though an
intrusion or malware attack.
Greynets also pose legal risks, as many consumer IM applications provide
little or no archiving of conversations. This can cause issues with regulatory
compliance for companies required to track and audit IM content.
As a result, more companies are turning to third-party solutions to archive
and manage greynet applications.
Specialised vendors offer everything from basic archiving software to
hardware-based network appliances that include support for mobile phones and
remote clients.
"Two and a half years ago more than half of our customers were financial,
energy and healthcare organisations that had laws requiring them to log these
conversations," said Frank Cabri, vice president of marketing at IM security
firm
Facetime.
"Now, companies like
McDonald's
and
Metlife
either have their own standards or have to comply with things like e-discovery.
Organisations are starting to go beyond email, and determine what their
infrastructure needs to look like."
Michael Osterman, president of
Osterman
Research, recommends firms to consider greynet security a "top three
priority" alongside web and email security and monitoring.
The problem with securing networks from greynet-launched threats is that the
applications often go unchecked by security systems that monitor email or web
traffic for threats.
Simply banning the use of IM clients or blocking them from the network is
often not an option.
"You can have a policy against IM use, but people are going to do it anyway.
People violate policies all the time," Osterman told
vnunet.com.
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