ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Jobs
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


Security threats Toolkit

Data Breaches

PGP: Encryption alone no cure for data breaches

Phil Dunkelberger, PGP Corporation

Published: 04 Feb 2008 16:46 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment
PGP: Encryption alone no cure for data breaches

One of the questions I'm frequently asked is: "If perimeter-based data-security strategies are breaking down, why aren't more companies using encryption to protect their confidential information?"

Although I'm not sure I agree completely with the question's premise, I believe what we're seeing has less to do with the role encryption will play in protecting confidential information than the rate at which enterprises can really upgrade their core information infrastructure.

Encryption is not the kind of technology that can be "painted on" an existing set of information-technology assets. Achieving comprehensive enterprise data protection requires a change in both policies and technology at the architectural level, followed by deliberate deployment everywhere sensitive information resides.

As one of my favourite chief information officers observed: "Rome wasn't built in a day, and that was a far easier goal to accomplish."

What I've observed, particularly in the last year, is the growing understanding by IT security professionals that General Patton was correct when he observed that "fixed embattlements are monuments to human stupidity".

With the vast majority of mission-critical data now being created and consumed on mobile devices outside most corporate security perimeters, data-security experts globally have realised that fixed data embattlements are a necessary but insufficient component of a comprehensive, enterprise data-protection strategy. These companies are rethinking their security strategies, and the leading firms — primarily in financial services and manufacturing — are implementing solutions that assume there is no perimeter in the classic sense. Most, if not all, of these new approaches involve broad deployment of various encryption technologies.

The Jericho Forum has been promoting this concept of "de-perimeterisation" for a number of years. What I'm seeing from the largest PGP Corporation customers is a belief that security now must travel with the data wherever it goes throughout the world. Because upgrading the security policies and technology in a large enterprise takes time and careful planning, however, this is not the type of trend that pops out fully formed — like a YouTube or Facebook — but evolves over time to address changing threat models.

I expect both the number of breaches and the cost per breach to increase in the short term as the profitability and frequency of identity theft rise in the increasingly organised international criminal community

Phil Dunkelberger, PGP Corporation

The other phenomenon driving this trend is the growing understanding that no institution is immune to the type of breach experienced by TJX in early 2007 or HM Revenue & Customs in late November.

So, although de-perimeterisation and the assumption that all firms are vulnerable are the current drivers for encryption adoption, there's a third, less understood phenomenon that I believe will become increasingly important in the next two years: the hard dollar costs of a breach.

TJX disclosed recently that it may spend $500m (£253m) mitigating the effects of the breach. The most recent study by the Ponemon Institute, which tracks the cost of breaches, estimates that each compromised record costs an affected company $197, up eight percent from 2006 and 43 percent from 2005.

I expect both the number of breaches and the cost per breach to increase in the short term as the profitability and frequency of identity theft rise in the increasingly organised international criminal community. This trend will, in turn, put increasing pressure on public and private institutions to protect sensitive data regardless of where it resides in the enterprise.

The final factor affecting the rate at which encryption technologies are deployed is the knowledge that to protect all data in motion and at rest in a large enterprise effectively, it isn't enough to deploy one point solution for email, one for laptops, a third for shared storage, and so on. Most chief information officers know from hard experience — and early public key infrastructure deployments — that a combination of such point solutions usually leads to data that is actually less secure and/or less available to those who need it.

Encryption by itself is not the answer, and the fact is that building or deploying a simple, single-application encryption technology just isn't that hard. The magic of enterprise data protection occurs when it is combined with a comprehensive data-protection policy and key-management system, and encompasses all of an enterprise's business, compliance and security requirements.

Building systems that meet these criteria is hard and should be undertaken only when implementers truly understand all of the enterprise's threat models and have identified the most cost-effective, scalable solutions.

Phil Dunkelberger is chief executive of security software company PGP Corporation.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with Konica

Did you find this article useful?
22 out of 25 people found this useful


More in this Special Report

The top five internal security threats

The top five internal security threats

It's widely known that internal staff are the biggest threat to IT security, but what specifically should an employer watch out for? more

Keeping mobile data from going walkabout

Keeping mobile data from going walkabout

Mobile email is no longer the preserve of upper management but providing access to company information on the go has its risks more

Lib Dems call for data guardians

Lib Dems call for data guardians

The Liberal Democrats are seeking the introduction of data guardians into the public and private sector, to protect citizens' information rights more

Worker suspended over loss of prisoner data

Worker suspended over loss of prisoner data

An employee at Home Office contractor PA Consulting has been suspended after the loss of a memory stick holding the unencrypted details of every prisoner in England and Wales more

Ministry of Justice reports nine data breaches

Ministry of Justice reports nine data breaches

The ministry reported the data breaches, affecting around 45,000 people, to the Information Commissioner's Office in the last financial year more

Foreign Office reports five data breaches since 2007

Foreign Office reports five data breaches since 2007

The data breaches at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office are thought to have affected less than 188 people in total more

ICO: Gov't ignoring data-sharing hazards

ICO: Gov't ignoring data-sharing hazards

The government is blindly pursuing data-sharing plans without heeding the potential pitfalls, information commissioner Richard Thomas has claimed more

Lords presses government for data-breach law

Lords presses government for data-breach law

The House of Lords has again urged the government to introduce a data-breach notification law, adding that banks should be liable for e-fraud losses more

Video: Get the most out of your data

Video: Get the most out of your data

How do companies deal with information management? Jonathan Steel, CEO of tech-research firm The Bathwick Group, gives insights based on a recent ZDNet.co.uk benchmark survey more

Justice minister urges overhaul of gov't data handling

Justice minister urges overhaul of gov't data handling

Michael Wills has called for the government to handle data transactions as carefully as financial transactions more

MoD announces data-protection action plan

MoD announces data-protection action plan

The ministry has published a plan of how it intends to meet 51 data-policy recommendations made as part of review into the loss of MoD laptops more

Systemic failure blamed for HMRC data loss

Systemic failure blamed for HMRC data loss

Two reports have found the loss by HMRC of 25 million child-benefit claimant details was 'entirely avoidable' more

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:




Sentry Posts Blog

The Technological Singularity

Are we approaching a point when machines may wake up and become self or seemingly self aware? Vernor Vinge in 1993 seemed to think so. He refered to this event as the "technological... More

2 comments

Mobile Operating Systems: MOPS At a Gl...

Mobile Operating Systems: At a Glance Author: Eric Everson, Founder MyMobiSafe Since posting my blog exposing the security Google G1 security issue, I have received a few emails... More

Post a comment

Met Police catch test cheats

I saw the funny side of this press release, I can just imagine the two people sitting in the car giving the answers to the questions. Why they had wires running from under the bonnet... More

Post a comment