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9 November 2007
Discipline blamed for non-compliance
Lack of discipline is to blame for non-compliance with regulations
and standards such as PCI DSS, according to log management experts
at the CSI 2007 conference in November.
“People are aware of the need for compliance, but the discipline
just isn’t there,” said AN Ananth, president of US log
management firm Prism Microsystems. “People always want to
solve their problems tomorrow – but often tomorrow is too
late, or maybe it never comes.”
Ananth said that users are becoming better educated about the various
dangers of non-compliance, but are not looking to resolve it. “No-one
is disputing the need for security, it’s just all about jostling
priorities.”
Chris Smith, vice-president of marketing for Alertlogic, a US provider
of IT compliance products, argued that money is often the reason
for non-compliance. “People are trying to comply [with PCI]
but most aren’t. The technology demanded by the standard is
too complicated and too expensive for mid-sized enterprises. It’s
these mid-sized companies that are suffering, because as an industry
most companies target large companies.”
Ananth disagrees. “It’s not that security is too expensive
or even that the security products needed are absent. It’s
just that people haven’t got around to it yet. Sadly, something
bad normally has to happen to trigger the need to invest in security.”
Both Ananth and Smith believe that increasing press coverage of
non-compliance risks and security breaches is a blessing for vendors.
“Well of course, if people see that this is happening, and
want to avoid it, hopefully they’ll rush out and buy my great
product,” said Smith.
But Ananth maintained that the media can only help sales to a certain
extent. “Fear, uncertainty and doubt will only take you so
far. But after a while, if a security product doesn’t hold
real value, then it won’t last,” he said.
“Of course the media sensationalise these threats,”
said Smith. “They like to talk about companies that aren’t
compliant.”
“The media plays on the public’s fear when it comes
to information security. If the reader is educated, then they’ll
get it and understand. Most readers are much savvier these days.
For an uneducated reader, however, of course it’s going to
invite fear,” said Ananth.
“I think it’s only right that the media publish breach
stories and news – people have the right to know. Especially
when they are directly effected, for example like in the TK Maxx
incident when people’s card details were lost,” said
Ananth, who argued that the potential loss of credibility is one
of the biggest motives for companies to comply.
People are driven to compliance for different reasons, concluded
Ananth, and as public companies “they have a responsibility
to their stock holders”. Computers are now so integrated into
every aspect of business that the price for non-compliance can far
exceed the cost of installing security products to comply. “Compliance
as a requirement is not likely to go away,” said Ananth.
CSI 2007: Flawless ID doesn’t
exist, says e-commerce specialist (7 November 2007)
CSI 2006: US and UK
government documents leak confidential data (13 November 2006)
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