Most of the world's top executives now consider security the single most important issue for their corporate networks. While at the same nearly four in five admit they open email attachments from strangers.
It's as if the perfect sysadmin survey has been produced. Company execs idiots, official. But then anyone who has been in charge of a company network will not be entirely surprised.
The survey from the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), backed by AT&T and published on Wednesday, found that security was the top network-related issue for 78 percent of the 254 senior executives who responded.
Respondents ironically say most of the problems were caused by employees, estimating that 83 percent of attacks were initiated internally, from sabotage, espionage or mistakes. Despite this, 78 percent of the idiots admitted to having clicked on an email attachment from an unknown person within the last year, a figure the EIU found "astonishing".
Such blunders have helped to drive the cost of network attacks from US$3.3 billion in 1997 to US$12 billion last year, according to Computer Economics figures cited by the EIU. This is driving security spending to rise faster than overall IT spending. On average the execs spent nine percent of their IT budgets on network security in 2002, rising to 11 percent last year and expected to hit 13 percent this year.
Executives are aware that their networking priorities -- such as giving remote workers access to the network and making customer and financial data available to employees -- are inextricably linked to security problems. More than 80 percent of executives admitted their goals left their firms vulnerable or extremely vulnerable to threats.
Security spending is moving from perimeter protection and intrusion detection to better tools for preventing attacks and recovering when they happen, executives said. Thirty-two percent said they already used or planned to use managed security services in the next two years, with another 14 percent saying they would use them in the long term. However, most of these companies (70 percent) are small and medium-sized firms.
The survey found that CEOs are increasingly taking responsibility for network security policy, while some companies are beginning to appoint a chief security officer, a move applauded by AT&T. "For any company, it is virtually impossible to ensure protection of assets without one person owning the focal point," said Ed Amoroso, information security officer at AT&T, in a statement.
Security moved up from its No. 2 position in last year's survey, when reliability and availability were the biggest concern.
The online survey canvassed 254 senior executives, with 40 percent of respondents from Europe, 27 percent from North America and 21 percent from Asia-Pacific, mostly representing the financial services, professional services, manufacturing, transportation and energy sectors. It was supplemented by in-depth interviews with executives and analysts. The research took place between March and April of this year.
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Making the Business Case for IT Consolidation
IT executives face the need to improve service delivery with limited resource increases. Two common strategies for achieving this are network and systems management tools and datacenter consolidation. Read on to discover how you can make a strong business case for IT Consolidation.





