Staff threaten network security from home

By Nick Heath, Special to ZDNet Asia
Friday, February 08, 2008 11:12 PM

Companies are being exposed to risks by home workers' bad behavior online, such as hijacking the neighbor's Wi-Fi and opening unsafe e-mail messages.

A Cisco-sponsored survey of more than 2,000 remote workers and IT managers worldwide uncovered a lack of discipline and vigilance among home workers on the Internet.

In the United Kindom, there is a growing trend for home workers to open unknown or suspicious looking e-mail messages, with 48 percent of respondents admitting to doing so. Eleven percent of those who took part in the survey confessed to hijacking their neighbor's Wi-Fi, and 22 percent admitted lending work computers to non-employees.

According to the survey, over half of managers believe their remote workers are becoming less diligent when it comes to security awareness, with the survey recording a four percent increase in people accessing work files with personal unprotected devices, and a three percent rise in people using work computers for personal reasons.

Cisco's chief security officer, John Stewart, said in a statement: "While working at home, people tend to let their guard down more than they do at the office."

Stewart said there was a need for companies to educate their employees about essential security practices and policies, and said managing corporate security is partly technology, partly process and partly awareness, education and communication.

"It's often more of a human challenge than a technical one," Stewart added.

Nick Heath of Silicon.com reported from London.


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Time for Inverted Networks
With wireless, usb memory sticks, etc., local area networks are more at risk than ever. I never believed that LAN's were safe, but with roaming access more and more a requirement, it is time to redefine the LAN. Basically, you should not trust the LAN or roaming users any more than someone hitting your website. There are sslvpn devices which can be used inside of the LAN that will verify what kind of PC is looking for access (i.e. does the client have a certain anti-virus, patch level, browser...). Roaming users can also be rated and have access to resources limited to where ever they are and what's on their systems. Take a look at (web link)
Posted by Dave Fischer on Saturday, February 09 2008 04:10 AM

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