Free Newsletters




   
CIO magazine chief information officer ERP IT strategy  research  analysis business technology e-business CRM customer relationship management e-business   enterprise resource management leadership
CIO.com
About
Search
Awards Programs
Subscribe
Magazine
Current
Previous
Print Links
Newsletters
CIO Store
CIO Conferences
CIO Executive Council
Blogs
News Alerts
CEO Reading
IT Strategy
Tech Linkletter
Tech Policy
Viewpoints
Experts
Alarmed
Analyst Corner
Beneath the Buzz
Consultant Briefing
Higher Learning
In the Know
Leading Questions
Weigh-In
Discussion Forums
Career
CIO Wanted
Counselor
IT Events Calendar
Movers & Shakers
Research & Polls
CIO Research Rpts
Quick Poll
Tech Poll
Reports & Guides
CIO Bookmark
Reading Room
Special Reports
Compliance
RITLAB
State of the CIO
Webcasts
White Papers
About Us
Advertise at CIO
Conference Info
Editorial Calendar
Editorial Staff
List Services
News Bureau
Reprints
Sales
Related Sites
CSO
CMO
Darwin
IDG Network
Feedback to CIO
© CXO Media Inc.
subscribe to CIO Magazine



Home > CIO Metrics
Regulatory Resource   Threat Intelligence      Resilient IT      Boardroom Strategies      
Resilient IT / Network and Infrastructure

Comprehensive Messaging Security

By Thomas Schmidt

For most organizations today, email is the single most critical channel for internal and external communication. With increases in network bandwidth, the use of email as a vehicle for rich media has exploded; beyond simple text, email is now used to send rich media, including HTML, graphics, audio and video. Having become critical for corporations in the 1990s, email is now a vital form of business record.

Of course, email is no longer the only form of electronic messaging and collaboration. In recent years, instant messaging (IM) has caught on in many organizations. Users at most organizations now use IM -- even if it isn’t supported by the IT department. It’s even been estimated that IM may overtake email as soon as this year in terms of the number of messages sent between users.

But just as with email, the ease and power of IM have caused a number of risks and challenges to arise. IM is increasingly the target for attackers to propagate IM-borne viruses, worms, spim (spam over IM), malware and phishing attacks. These attacks have grown exponentially over the past three years, increasing the need for real-time threat response for IM and peer-to-peer (P2P) applications. For example, one of the top malicious code families in the first half of 2007 was the Mespam Trojan, which sends instant messages containing a malicious URL.

Over time, the overall impact of these messaging threats has begun to be understood and measured in the following ways:

  • End-user productivity decrease due to spam
  • Asset damage and downtime due to virus attacks and worm outbreaks
  • Regulatory pressure to monitor and control inbound and outbound email content
  • Time spent by administrators to deploy and manage a messaging security solution

At the same time, messaging threats are constantly evolving. For example:

  • There was no evidence that spam levels subsided after the most recent holiday season, as would be expected.
  • Europe is the new King of Spam. The percentage of spam messages originating from Europe surpassed that of North America.
  • Playing on people’s hope for a tax refund, spammers have recently been sending an official-looking email bearing the logo of the U.S. Treasury Department, promising recipients an early tax refund.
  • Spammers are also capitalizing on rising gas prices. Some Russian spam promotes a device that would allow the user to change manure into bio-fuel.
  • One of the most persistent Italian spam attacks has been a work-from-home job offer. The email seeks applications for “Administrative Agents for Online Payments” and “Remote Support Agents.” In fact, this is a money-laundering scheme.

The ongoing issue facing messaging administrators, then, is how to preserve the value of messaging in light of these escalating security threats.

All-in-one protection
For many of today’s organizations, the issue is compounded by the challenge of keeping up with growing messaging and spam volumes while keeping costs down. Increasingly, this means deploying a solution that integrates email security, IM security and outbound content control capabilities in one gateway-based appliance. Specifically, the appliance must enable administrators to:

  • Stop spam, denial-of-service attacks and other inbound email threats
  • Leverage global and local sender reputation analysis to reduce email infrastructure costs by restricting unwanted connections
  • Filter email content to remove unwanted content, demonstrate regulatory compliance and protect against intellectual property and data leakage over email
  • Secure and protect public IM communications using the same management console as email
  • Obtain visibility into messaging trends and events with minimal administrative burden

Moreover, while messaging threats in general are on the rise, they also fluctuate, leading many organizations to demand the ability to instantly adjust spam and virus filtering capacity without having to add or configure the physical infrastructure. This virtual option would give them the choice of quickly and incrementally scaling their messaging security infrastructure while taking advantage of the resource utilization benefits of virtualization. It would also allow them to avoid provisioning to peak capacity with special-purpose hardware that can’t be used for other applications when spam waves recede.

Conclusion
With messaging systems becoming more and more vital to today’s organizations, protection against inbound and outbound email- and IM-borne threats is more important than ever. By tapping advanced content filtering and structured data protection support, IT can more effectively control sensitive data, reduce the risks associated with data leakage, and meet regulatory compliance mandates and corporate governance demands.

 

Tom Schmidt writes frequently about information security topics. He has more than 15 years' experience as a writer and editor in high-tech publishing.

CIO Strategy Center is a daily editorial resource offering innovative insights and strategies for building an integrated, secure and resilient IT infrastructure.

Articles by Topic
Network and Infrastructure
Analytics and ROI
Strategies
Related Content
Fast Fact

Europe is the new King of Spam. The percentage of spam messages originating from Europe surpassed that of North America for the third month in a row, representing a significant shift in where the bulk of the world’s spam is supposedly sent from.

Sponsor Tools
Podcast Audio Content

CIO Strategy Center is now available in audio format.

This week's feature topic is:


Preparing for a Disaster
Playtime: 8 min 07 sec



Download | Subscribe







Advertisers



Free Newsletters
Sponsor Content
 Domains
Compliance CIO Partner Domain for I.T. Productivity
The domain for everything you need to assess, measure and improve
IT Productivity within your organization, Whitepapers, Books, Research, Benchmarking tools and lots more.
 Webcasts
Compliance Failure is not an option: Why online compliance and security can’t wait.
Compliance BI Standardization: Attend our virtual conference for real advice.
Compliance Getting Smart about Offshoring: How Visual Simulation Gets It Right the First Time
Compliance Turning Best Practices to Best Projects
Compliance Securing Enterprise Data In An Unsecured World
Compliance A New Game—The Fast Emerging World of IP Convergence
Compliance All CIO Webcasts
 White Papers
Compliance Organizations Shift Focus to Information Management
Compliance Tera-Scale Data Warehouse Appliances Overcome the Technology Bottleneck
Compliance Knowing the Risk
Compliance Why Asset Management and Discovery are Core Contributors to Effective Business Service Management
Compliance Start your ERP upgrade with a distinctive master data advantage
Compliance Putting your Spend Data Warehouse on steroids
Compliance All CIO White Papers

IDG ENTERPRISE NETWORK

NetApp launches expanded NAS line - Infoworld Staff
IBM, BEA lay out new Java specs - Infoworld Staff
  »More  

Phishing scams rocket
Wi-Fi switches: breakthrough year, future fear
  »More  

Users get going on SP2 rollouts
Shark Tank: Just one more thing to remodel
  »More  

SPONSORED LINKS:
Align IT with business goals. Introducing PlanView Enterprise.
A data warehouse 10-50x faster at ½ the cost. Learn more!
How do you compare with 565 IT organizations?
For real advice on BI Standardization attend the Virtual Conference on Feb 22
Manage IT Change. Manage the Business. Free white paper.
Ten Principles for Knowledge Management Success" - Get the free white paper from ServiceWare
Audit the Data or Else: Un-audited data increases business risk Grid
See Qualcomm, EPL, and Deutsche Post on the Oracle Grid
Preventing Client/Vendor Mismatch: click here to learn more

Free Newsletters

Dated: March 01, 2005
http://www.cio.com/blog_view.html?ID=221


About CIO.com | Welcome | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Linking to us

CIO.COM complies with the ASME Guidelines with IDG extensions for new media.

CIO magazine chief information officer ERP strategy IT research analysis business technology management e-business knowledge management intranet CRM cio.com CRM customer relationship management e-business ERP enterprise resource management leadership management measuring IT value outsourcing supply chain

© 1994 - 2005 CXO Media Inc.

An International Data Group (IDG) Company



 HOME  CURRENT ISSUE  ARCHIVE   About CIO :: Advertise :: Subscribe :: Conferences 

Reprints, IDG Network, Privacy Policy

THE IDG NETWORK
CSO :: CMO :: Darwin :: Computerworld :: Network World :: Infoworld :: PC World :: Bio-IT World
IT Careers:: JavaWorld :: Macworld :: Mac Central :: Playlist :: GamePro :: GameStar :: Gamerhelp



Problems/complaints/compliments about this site can be sent to deiben@cio.com.