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Total Number of Subscribers: 1626 |
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Date:09th July 2010 |
Compiled by: M Sathya Kumar |
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A Homeland
Security official calls on CFOs to break down the corporate silos that house
cybercrime risk management.
Cybercrime
is not a problem that is growing, or coming, or off in the future," said
Greg Schaffer, an assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security who heads up the agency's Office of Cybersecurity and
Communications. "This is a problem right now," he told an audience
of finance executives at the CFO Core Concerns conference in Schaffer,
onetime chief risk officer for Alltel Communications, asserted that there is
a "disconnect" between corporate risk managers and information
technology professionals. For the most part, he said, companies have kept
risk management related to cybercrime in "a silo" within the IT
department, rather than treating it as something that permeates the entire
operation. CFOs have a responsibility to break down such silos, he said,
given their involvement in enterprise risk management. Thwarting
cybercrime has moved beyond simply keeping networks operating smoothly or
intelligent gizmos running without a glitch, said Schaffer. Indeed, a major
challenge for companies is simply realizing that they have been victimized.
Cybercrime isn't like a warehouse break-in where managers find inventory
missing the next morning, he explained: "If [a cybercriminal] steals
from you, you still have the data." That
means companies must have systems and processes in place to detect a breach,
and have the forensic capabilities to retrieve information about a theft soon
after it happens. If they don't, the chances of tracking a crime to its
source are "infinitesimal," noted Schaffer. The
only way to stay ahead of the crooks is to have risk managers and IT
practitioners thinking about the crimes before they happen, said Schaffer,
noting that the stakes are high and growing. On average, a single cyberbreach
costs a company $6.75 million. That adds up, considering that according to a
recent international poll, all 27 countries participating in the survey
claimed to have experienced financial losses related to cybercrimes during
the past year. Schaffer
also pointed out that security-software maker McAfee says 30 million examples
of new malicious software were released on the Internet in 2009. That's about
47,000 new cases of "malware" per day. Shaffer discussed a few
company-specific cases, noting that one U.S.-based bank lost $9 million in
one day from cybertheft at ATM networks located in 27 different cities.
Meanwhile, three major oil companies confirmed that they were jointly
targeted by an "extremely aggressive" networking scheme to steal
intellectual property and other proprietary data, including a
multimillion-dollar research project on oil exploration. Article was earlier published in one of the reputed business magazine. |
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