Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,630,284 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Computer security: networks face new email-related threats.


Talk of a "zombie A computer that has been covertly taken over in order to perform some nefarious task. It is estimated that millions of PCs around the world have been compromised and, under the control of a third party, routinely transmit messages unbeknownst to the user.  network" might trigger thoughts of B-movie classics like "Night of the Living Dead." But to email protection experts, a zombie network is nothing even faintly amusing: it's one of the latest and most threatening ways of corrupting corporate networks.

Such zombie networks are created through a partnership of email spammers and software virus writers, says Marc Borbas, product manager for Sophos, a British-based company specializing in anti-virus and email protection. Once a specific computer in a network has been infected, it becomes a zombie--in this case, he says, it becomes "an emailing machine that spammers can tap back into." These individual machines can be linked into a "network" designed to evade filtering technology. "These can bypass a lot of systems that look at the sender," Borbas says.

Looking at other concerns in network protection and security, Borbas mentions the illegal exchange of classified or customer data, some of it inadvertent. "Our approach is that [controlling this] is a filtering job," he says. Sophos, for instance, monitors both inbound in·bound 1  
adj.
Bound inward; incoming: inbound commuter traffic.

Adj. 1. inbound
 and outbound email traffic, looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 keywords, types of documents, file extensions, etc. Emails can be routed through a compliance officer, or passed to an encryption The reversible transformation of data from the original (the plaintext) to a difficult-to-interpret format (the ciphertext) as a mechanism for protecting its confidentiality, integrity and sometimes its authenticity. Encryption uses an encryption algorithm and one or more encryption keys.  system for added security.

Security measures Noun 1. security measures - measures taken as a precaution against theft or espionage or sabotage etc.; "military security has been stepped up since the recent uprising"
security
 such as email content filtering See Web filtering and parental control software. , attachment filtering and encryption are critical components of regulatory compliance and policy enforcement, as well as automated processes that dictate how violations against corporate policies are handled by HR, compliance officers or CFOs.

Then there's the issue of dealing with sensitive emails, which have become a ripe area for prosecutors digging into archived messages. "That's definitely a huge challenge for lots of companies," Borbas says. Email architecture "wasn't perceived as a means to store messages," and the response "has been relatively manual."

Moreover, because of possible legal ramification ramification /ram·i·fi·ca·tion/ (ram?i-fi-ka´shun)
1. distribution in branches.

2. a branching.


ram·i·fi·ca·tion
n.
A branching shape or arrangement.
, companies may want to delete email messages after 12 months, for instance. But they need a policy and the appropriate technology to do that.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Financial Executives International
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:businessBRIEFS
Author:Heffes, Ellen M.
Publication:Financial Executive
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 1, 2005
Words:321
Previous Article:Key findings about innovation.(businessBRIEFS)(Brief Article)
Next Article:Financial reporting: companies still lack key reporting data.(businessBRIEFS)(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Security: is company data an asset or a threat?(European Union's Data Protection Act and the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act)
One virus engine not enough! (Security).
Secure, or paranoid?(Security Viewpoint)
When insiders go outside the lines: for all the money companies have spent to secure their networks' outside perimeters against hackers and viruses,...
Infosecurity Europe 2005.(CONFERENCE CLIPPINGS)
"Malware evolution: January - March 2005".(Security)
Sophos Security report reveals Trojan domination in first half of 2006.(Security News and Products)
Sophos security threat management report: update July 2006.(DATABASE AND NETWORK INTELLIGENCE)
Spyware--the hidden threat to business security.(SOFTWARE INTELLIGENCE)
Cyber extortion is now a very real threat--is your business at risk?(Infosecurity Europe 2006: 25th-27th April 2006, Olympia, London.)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles