Tuesday, July 17, 2012

E-Espionage: how good is your enterprise security in 2012?

 e-Espionage: a luminous and present threat to enterprise carelessness

 e-Espionage: It's no longer rightful for spooks

‘When you hear the limit "espionage" what springs to mind?' asks a modern PCW UK report. ‘If it's James Bond, in that case you need to think again.' Back in July 2010, ASIO Director David Irvine before-mentioned corporate networks were as much a target for ‘foreign cyber sleuths seeking to make off with Australia's secrets' as defence and control agencies. In Britain, MI5 issued similar warnings.

Security analyst David Lacey makes the end more sharply: ‘If your organisation owns denunciation of commercial value to others, has form in a mould new sources of oil or elastic fluid, or designs products that are the emulate of your competitors, then you last and testament need to raise your game more than traditional best industry practice levels to rebuff these attacks. These are persistent attacks, what one are coming your way, and they won't arrest.'

In updating this series of articles, we look into:

The extent of e-espionage in traffic and industry;

What kinds of organisation and denunciation are at risk;

Why the attacks are in such a manner hard to detect;

New technologies that be at hand you a fighting chance.

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