www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

Apps and work: data put at risk

Updated: 2013-04-07 07:44

By Quentin Hardy(The New York Times)

  Print Mail Large Medium  Small

 Apps and work: data put at risk

Rajiv Gupta, chief executive of Skyhigh Networks, right, with engineers at the company's Cupertino, California, headquarters. Peter Dasilva for The New York Times

Apps and work: data put at risk

SAN FRANCISCO - As is the case with many busy people, Delyn Simons's life has become an open phone app of commingled corporate and personal information.

"I've got Dropbox, Box, YouSendIt, Teambox, Google Drive," says Ms. Simons, a 42-year-old executive, naming some of the services on her iPhone that store memos, spreadsheets, customer information and soccer schedules.

She and her colleagues at Mashery, a 170-employee company that helps other companies build more apps, also share corporate data on GroupMe, Evernote, Skype and Google Hangouts. "From the standpoint of corporate I.T.," she says, "my team is a problem."

While the company's most confidential information is encrypted and available only to authorized executives, John Oberon, Mashery's information technology chief, who is supposed to keep track of company data, said "there's only so much you can do to stop people from forwarding an e-mail or storing a document off a phone."

Once the data leaves the corporate network, protecting it becomes much harder. Searching for the name of almost any large company, plus the word "confidential," yields supposedly secret documents that someone has taken from the company network and published.

Netflix, the streaming video service, recently found employees using 496 smartphone apps, primarily for data storage, communications and collaboration. Cisco Systems, which powers much of the Internet with computer networking gear, found several hundred apps, as well as services for shopping and personal scheduling, touching its own network via employees.

"People are going to bring their own devices, their own data, their own software applications, even their own work groups," drawing off friends and contractors at other companies, said Bill Burns, the director of information technology infrastructure at Netflix. "If you try and implant software that limits an employee's capabilities, you're adding a layer of complexity."

Almost no service is invulnerable. In 2011, Chinese hackers obtained access to hundreds of United States government accounts on Google's Gmail. Last July, Dropbox, one of the most widely used storage services, reported a loss of data from a large number of customers. Without special instructions, customer sales information in the online service of Salesforce.com can be moved to private accounts at Box. Evernote recently said user names, e-mail address and passwords had been stolen in an attack, requiring the passwords of more than 50 million accounts to be reset.

In 2011, Juniper Networks found more than 28,000 samples of mobile malware, mostly for capturing and transferring information like passwords. In January this year, Florida's Juvenile Justice Department reported that 114,538 youth and employee records had disappeared when a storage device with no password was stolen. The state will pay for a year of credit monitoring for everyone whose data was lost.

Last September, a customer notified Rite Aid that he could obtain other customers' names, addresses and prescription records from the company's mobile app. (Rite Aid says the problem has been fixed and that it is not aware of any data loss.)

Even without proof of compromised accounts, such losses can cost a company both money and reputation.

Some apps onto which employees may move company information, like Facebook, are well known. Others, like Remember the Milk, used for completing tasks, are news even to some of the experts in I.T. Skyhigh Networks, which recently started monitoring personal use of apps, has counted more than 1,200 services used in corporate networks from personal devices.

Skyhigh signs up for each service, along with 1,000 others that have not yet touched a corporate network, and researches them for security issues, like how easy it is to get inside the system and obtain another customer's data. The company then tunes a customer's corporate network to allow services to have different degrees of access to information.

"We have to be careful how we inspect for security vulnerabilities, since we don't want to get arrested ourselves," says Rajiv Gupta, Skyhigh's chief executive.

The problem of data leakage is as old as someone taking a carbon copy home on the weekend. What is different now is how people can take data with a finger swipe, and how little they know about whether a service has malware.

Companies do not want to stand in the way of "life splicing," as the intermingling of home and work tasks is known, because it mostly plays in a company's favor. They just want more security.

The New York Times

(China Daily 04/07/2013 page10)

主站蜘蛛池模板: 伊人色在线观看 | 日本人的色道www免费一区 | 免费黄色三级网站 | 免费看a级 | 中国二级毛片 | www.热| 欧美激情一级欧美精品 | 美女脱了内裤张开腿让男人桶网站 | 全部孕妇毛片 | 久久久99精品免费观看 | 精品综合在线 | 呦视频在线一区二区三区 | 5x性区m免费毛片视频看看 | 国产午夜精品久久理论片小说 | 日韩综合网站 | 亚洲综合日韩欧美一区二区三 | 欧美黑人性xxx猛交 欧美很黄视频在线观看 | av18在线播放| 欧美 自拍 | 一二三区在线观看 | www.精品国产 | 国产午夜精品理论片久久影视 | 一区二区日韩 | 亚洲精品第一区二区在线 | 日韩一级黄色 | 一区二区欧美视频 | 欧美高清在线视频一区二区 | www.久久 | 国产三级全黄 | 国产在线观看免费一级 | 三级毛片大全 | 久草.com| 亚洲最大网站在线 | 午夜宅男宅女看在线观看 | 成人国产在线视频在线观看 | 国产精品亚洲欧美日韩区 | 国产特级全黄一级毛片不卡 | 欧美激情亚洲一区中文字幕 | 亚洲精品专区一区二区欧美 | 中文字幕乱码在线观看 | 中文字幕在线成人免费看 |