Radio waves know no boundaries. Therein lies the Wi-Fi rub. Even as enterprises equip their employees with Smartphones, PDAs, and wireless laptops, the data traversing the wireless LAN can be intercepted all too easily. . .. Radio waves know no boundaries. Therein lies the Wi-Fi rub. Even as enterprises equip their employees with Smartphones, PDAs, and wireless laptops, the data traversing the wireless LAN can be intercepted all too easily . The headaches don't end there. IT departments have to deploy authentication to make sure only legitimate users have wireless access to corporate data, applications, and services. They also have to guard against someone on the street grabbing hotspot bandwidth and hitching a ride to the Internet--courtesy of the corporate budget. No wonder Gartner puts WLAN security at No. 2 on its top 10 list of security risks. It also offers some basic advice: Consider the security implications before deploying wireless, and make sure to have the appropriate procedures and policies in place. The link for this article located at TechWeb is no longer available. . WLAN security faces unique challenges in authentication and protecting corporate data from interception, especially with reliance on passwords and encryption protocols. WLAN Security, Corporate Data Safety, Network Integrity. . Anthony Pell
Watching the TV drama Law & Order, Detective Briscoe confronts the manager of a seedy Times Square hotel, demanding records of the suspect in room 206. The manager, behind a wall of bulletproof glass and wearing a stained T-shirt, tells the . . . . Watching the TV drama Law & Order, Detective Briscoe confronts the manager of a seedy Times Square hotel, demanding records of the suspect in room 206. The manager, behind a wall of bulletproof glass and wearing a stained T-shirt, tells the detective to "shove it." Briscoe then says something like, "I can get the health department down here to shut you down, " and the manager hastily turns over whatever records the detective demands. This common scene from TV detective shows now has support from real-life. A recent study by CSO magazine found that many Chief Security Officers have or would turn over corporate, business partner and customer records just because a law enforcement or government official requested it, without a subpoena, court order, or any other formal legal process. Despite all the concerns about expanded law enforcement powers under the USA-PATRIOT Act and the Homeland Security legislation, beyond all the fretting over Carnivore, Magic Lantern, or other technologies, the willingness of corporate agents to simply "turn over" our private personal records represents a much more significant threat to privacy and civil liberty. And while appropriate and reasonable in some circumstances, in many cases the voluntary disclosure of information may represent a violation of corporate privacy policies, which could r The link for this article located at SecurityFocus is no longer available. . Inspector Morales faces a restaurant owner, disclosing alarming risks to consumer security in business operations.. Privacy Threats, Corporate Data Management, Law Enforcement Requests. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Think that encryption will secure corporate data? Not according to virus specialist Ncipher (https://www.entrust.com/products/hsm). The company says it’s found viruses that hunt through a computer’s memory for the key used to decrypt data. First proposed in 1999 by Dr. Adi . . .. Think that encryption will secure corporate data? Not according to virus specialist Ncipher (https://www.entrust.com/products/hsm). The company says it’s found viruses that hunt through a computer’s memory for the key used to decrypt data. First proposed in 1999 by Dr. Adi Shamir, a member of the Weizmann Institute in Israel and coinventor of the popular Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman (RSA) encryption algorithm, this is the first time an actual implementation of these viruses has been discovered. The link for this article located at Network Magazine is no longer available. . Experts from Ncipher warn that encryption alone might fail to protect corporate data, as malware can target decryption keys stored in system memory.. encryption security, corporate data threats, malware risks, data protection strategies. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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