Consumers vs. Compliance: Where the Security Buck Stops
Regardless of the laws on the books, consumers hold companies responsible for data breaches, spyware, and phishing attacks
IT Compliance Institute(December 6, 2005)
When Data Walks: Safeguarding Portable Media
When cell phones have 40 GB hard drives and data breaches can cost millions of dollars, should organizations that handle sensitive information restrict the use of removable storage?
IT Compliance Institute(November 15, 2005)
Case Study: Tracking Software Changes for Compliance
"We've considered getting badges and guns, but the company frowns on the guns," explains the director of configuration management for ADP, a financial services software company. Certainly, tracking software changes can be a problem. Getting rid of the paper trail was a big first step.
IT Compliance Institute (November 1, 2005)
Learning from CardSystems: Compliance Doesn’t Equal Security
CardSystems blamed a shoddy audit for its 40-million-record data loss. But the auditor claimed the breached systems were beyond its scope. Who was right? Who was to blame? What can be learned from the argument?
IT Compliance Institute (October 4, 2005)
Zipping, Encrypting, and Shipping under HIPAA
Could your backup tapes disappear during shipment? Aurora Health Care decided to avoid the risk by encrypting and zipping health data before sharing or shipping it.
IT Compliance Institute (September 20, 2005)
Acute Care: HIPAA, a Hospital, and Database Security
If you want to secure databases containing protected health information, the first big challenge is to find them.
IT Compliance Institute (September 13, 2005)
FDIC: Spyware Cure Requires More Than Technology
When the FDIC recommended financial organizations improve their response to spyware, it meant helping to protect customers, as well. And, as its recent Financial Institution Letter notes, technology alone won't solve the problem.
IT Compliance Institute (September 6, 2005)
Bio-security: Healthcare Firm Uses Fingerprints for HIPAA Compliance
To comply with HIPAA security requirements in an environment with many public terminals, many different applications and databases, and many offsite users, West Tennessee Healthcare exchanged passwords for fingerprints. That was five years ago, and the company's CIO hasn't looked back.
IT Compliance Institute (August 23, 2005)
Case Study: Screen Actors Guild Healthcare Monitors IM
Ensuring the security of personally identifying information is a must for any healthcare organization. But the healthcare arm of the Screen Actors Guild was especially set on ensuring that information on well-known actors and celebrities didn't leak out through instant messaging.
IT Compliance Institute (August 2, 2005)
Financial IM and E-mail Storage Mandate
For financial services firms, archiving electronic communications isn't an option: it's a mandate. But not all organizations interpret the regulations correctly or have the technology approaches to meet auditor demands.
IT Compliance Institute (July 26, 2005)
Philadelphia Exchange Audits for Compliance
When it comes to regulations, organizations must implement effective processes and procedures or face the consequences. But not all organizations are sweating. The Philadelphia Stock Exchange shares its approach to meeting regulations—including managing auditors and staying competitive.
IT Compliance Institute (July 19, 2005)
Three Good Reasons to Look at Database Security Software
If you're relying on your database for access authentication, administration, and auditing, you may be on shaky ground. These core information security features aren't built into most database management systems. Third party tools can fill the gaps, but what kinds of functionality should security managers look for?
IT Compliance Institute (May 31, 2005)
Data Defense: Six Practices for Safeguarding Information
Databases are under the gun, with a spate of recent database breaches and backup-tape losses leading the headlines. While database security isn’t a new topic for regulated companies, today’s environment makes it imperative to properly lock down databases automatically. Here are policies and procedures to help.
IT Compliance Institute (May 17, 2005)
Secure the Farm: Evaluating Secure Storage Appliances
Database encryption protects critical data, while reducing the administrative cost and risks attached to its storage, transportation, and management.
IT Compliance Institute (April 26, 2005)
Out of Breach: Eight Ways to Beat IT Policy Resistance
Nobody loves reading IT policies, but every employee must adhere to them. From designing readable policies to making reasonable exceptions, IT and compliance managers must apply both professional insight and personal intelligence to policy enforcement. Eight best practices can help IT managers beat employee resistance to new policies.
IT Compliance Institute (April 19, 2005)
Securing Web Services in a Regulatory Environment
To secure Web services and meet regulatory requirements, organizations must keep their business and IT agendas aligned.
IT Compliance Institute (April 12, 2005)
Mortgage Data Network Tackles GLB Compliance
Companies handling confidential customer data must do more than claim their information is secure: they must prove they’re above reproach.
IT Compliance Institute (April 5, 2005)
InfoSec Synergies: Aligning Standards Improves Security
Pre-packaged policies and new "crosswalks" between HIPAA requirement and major security standards help companies blaze a faster trail to proven, defensible information security practices.
IT Compliance Institute (March 29, 2005)
Corporate Security Awareness Grows but Funding Lags
Survey shows security managers still face budget battle. (Reprint)
IT Compliance Institute (March 15, 2005)
Finding Better Opportunities for Automation ROI
SOX Approach Shifts From Tactical to Strategic
IT Compliance Institute (March 1, 2005)
The Good-Intention Gap: Records Management Realities
A “credibility gap” between the good intentions of organizations and what employees actually do highlights critical flaws in information-management.
IT Compliance Institute (February 1, 2005)
Compliance Drives Network Security Spending in 2005
In 2005, will the market view of compliance as a business and operational challenge overshadow compliance as an IT point-problem?
IT Compliance Institute (February 1, 2005)
Information Security Compliance: Outsourcing Grows
This year is likely to mark a sea-change in companies’ willingness to outsource information security practices. As compliance deadlines loom, many CIOs are opting out of building in-house security practices and turning to managed-security services vendors as a more viable and reliable compliance option.
IT Compliance Institute (January 18, 2005)
Opening the Black Box: IT Controls Aid Compliance
By helping companies to document cryptic IT processes, development frameworks promote compliance and improve productivity along the way.
IT Compliance Institute (January 4, 2005) |