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TOP THREE LINKS YOU MUST CLICK ON Security Spending in 2008: 3 of Every 5 IT Pros to Increase Spending This Year
Businesses are protecting their employees, assets, and bottom lines
By: Java News Desk
Mar. 10, 2008 09:30 AM
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Cisco today announced a final set of findings from annual research on remote workers' impact on corporate security, revealing that three of every five IT decision makers plan to increase security spending within the next year. Commissioned by Cisco and conducted by InsightExpress, a third-party market research firm, the study features surveys of more than 2,000 remote workers and IT professionals from various industries in 10 countries: the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, China, India, Australia, and Brazil. The findings indicate that spending will increase based on the financial losses that businesses suffer from attacks on corporate networks and employees -- including employees who work outside of the office. One of the most intriguing findings involves global demographics, which play a significant role in worldwide security spending trends. The highest percentage of IT decision makers who plan to boost spending are from nations that are relative newcomers to widespread Internet and IP-based corporate networking. Of the 10 countries in the study, China, India, and Brazil feature the highest number of IT decision makers who are not only planning to increase spending in general, but the largest percentage who will increase security investments by more than 10 percent year-over-year. According to John N. Stewart, Cisco's chief security officer, large populations of network-dependent employees in China, India, and Brazil were not overwhelmed by Code Red, NIMDA, and the other notorious malware attacks as pervasively as in Internet-dependent, consumer-based economies like the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Japan. However, today they represent three of the world's fastest growing economies, and their dependence on the Internet and corporate networks is rising rapidly. The study indicates that risky behavior from remote workers in these three countries, such as opening suspicious emails, hijacking wireless networks from neighbors, or sharing corporate devices with non-employees, is much more extensive than in nations that feature a longer history of corporate Internet use. "During the past few years, virus attacks caused the most damage in countries where Internet adoption was greatest," Stewart said. "As new countries increase adoption, those that drive the new Internet growth can learn from others to understand the inherent security challenges -- especially those who use the Internet to shop or work remotely. Remote workers often represent the intersection of 'employee' and 'consumer,' a connection point where attacks target and exploit the networks and corporate devices that remote workers use away from their offices. For multinational corporations and the IT departments that support them, understanding their employee's level of security awareness and experience is key in fostering tighter relationships, building trust, and administering effective education programs that will ultimately help to protect the enterprise." Although China, India, and Brazil grabbed the spotlight, the spending trend
is not relegated to emerging economies. More than half of the IT respondents in
eight of the 10 countries are planning to increase security spending this year.
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