topleft
topright
Enter the Member Network Zone View the Top 10 Points Leaderboard View Members Who Are Currently Online View Latest Member Activity

Featured Members


Member Network Zone

Expert Blog Comments

Who's Resistant to Change? Not Me!
Unfortunately, in hard times employees fear change -- rather thsn embracing it and in doing so possi...
Life, Liberty, and Access to the Web
I found it interesting that the United States and Canada - places where most citizens have access to...
Agility? Surely You Jest...
Peter, Glad you liked the line. Feel free to use it.
Agility? Surely You Jest...
Ellen, "A good tool in a dysfunctional environment will not solve the problems" is probably one of ...
Agility? Surely You Jest...
Over many years as an IT journalist I have heard more tech buzzwords than I'd care to repeat. After ...
1 in 3 IT Staff Snoops On Colleagues: Survey Print E-mail

Also See:
Wal-Mart Spying: Good, Bad, Or Just The Wave Of The Future?


FRANKFURT (Reuters)—One in three information technology professionals abuses administrative passwords to access confidential data such as colleagues' salary details, personal emails or board-meeting minutes, according to a survey.


U.S. information security company Cyber-Ark surveyed 300 senior IT professionals, and found that one-third admitted to secretly snooping, while 47 percent said they had accessed information that was not relevant to their role.


advertisement

"All you need is access to the right passwords or privileged accounts and you're privy to everything that's going on within your company," Mark Fullbrook, Cyber-Ark's UK director, said in a statement released along with the survey results on Thursday.


"For most people, administrative passwords are a seemingly innocuous tool used by the IT department to update or amend systems. To those 'in the know' they are the keys to the kingdom," he added.


Cyber-Ark said privileged passwords get changed far less frequently than user passwords, with 30 percent being changed every quarter and 9 percent never changed at all, meaning that IT staff who have left an organization could still gain access.


It added that seven out of 10 companies rely on outdated and insecure methods to exchange sensitive data, with 35 percent choosing email and 35 percent using couriers, while 4 percent still relied on the postal system.


(Reporting by Georgina Prodhan)


(c) Reuters 2008. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.




Comment on this article
RSS comments

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.

 
< Previous   Next >




White Paper Library