DocumentCode
1184792
Title
The Great Wall syndrome [workplace information security]
Author
Thelander, Michael
Author_Institution
Chrome Syst., Portland, OR, USA
Volume
7
Issue
5
fYear
2005
Firstpage
25
Lastpage
30
Abstract
A 2004 survey of Fortune 100 companies by the Ponemon Institute found that insiders were responsible for roughly 70 percent of reported security breaches (Reardon, 2005). BBC News, quoting another survey by data forensics from Ibas, stated that 70 percent of staff surveyed have stolen key information from the workplace, that 72 percent of these offenders had no ethical issues with helping themselves to information that would benefit them in a new job, and that 30 percent of respondents had stolen contact data when they left an employer (2004).
Keywords
security of data; social aspects of automation; Great Wall syndrome; workplace information security; Computer networks; Data security; Drives; Firewire; Forensics; Information security; Memory management; Personal digital assistants; Portable media players; Universal Serial Bus; IT Managers; Intellectual property rights infringement; Moore´s Law; PC security; PDAs; Vicarious liability; acceptable use policy (AUP); iPods; lifestyle computing; network security; permissions; security risks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
IT Professional
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1520-9202
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MITP.2005.126
Filename
1516086
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