Increasingly, employees are using mobile devices such as laptops, PDAs and smart phones to work with corporate data while at work and from home. With increasing sophistication, these devices provide greater access from these devices to company data. And the number of endpoints in use will reach one billion by 2011.
The standard practice has been to protect these devices through anti-virus, anti-spyware, desktop firewall, intrusion prevention and device control technology. This approach is proving insufficient with increasing number of employees on the move and corporate boundaries becoming fluid.
Smart phones can be attacked using Bluetooth and can also be affected by e-mails, downloads and Wi-Fi. Snoopware can send text messages from these devices without the knowledge of the owner. The writers of such malicious software have even more incentive now as an increasing number of users are using mobile devices for banking transactions.
Security software writers are trying to keep up with the trends and have released products for mobile devices. Companies have to make sure to the extent possible that the devices their employees use have up-to-date versions of such software. Password protection of the devices and adopting a total approach to securing corporate data on the assumption that the endpoints are unsafe are advised in the emerging scenario.
Read the news at The Hindu.
