Clearswift
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (BusinessWire EON) May 10, 2007 --
Clearswift
Survey results highlights:
-
More than one third (34 percent) of organizations don’t
monitor employees’ use of the Internet
-
More than half (51 percent) of businesses don’t
know whether they’ve lost confidential
information via social media outlets
-
20 percent of IT and business decision-makers don’t
have a policy governing appropriate use of the Internet, including
social media sites
-
20 percent of organizations do not allow blogging at work while 45
percent don’t have a policy on it
-
39 percent of IT and business decision makers consider social media to
be relevant to today’s corporate
environment, while 36 percent do not see social media as relevant to
their businesses
-
13 percent of organizations are not aware of social media and have no
policy on it
For many organizations, the impact and benefits of Web 2.0 or social
media sites on their businesses are still unknown; this according to a
recent survey of U.S. IT and business decision makers conducted by
Clearswift. While the majority of organizations understand the growing
popularity of social media sites, and recognize that 71 percent of their
staff use Web mail, 62 percent use forums, 56 percent use blogs, 36
percent of those surveyed do not see them as relevant to their business
and have no plans on using them in the future. For the purpose of this
survey, Clearswift defined social media sites as blogs, forums, Web
mail, instant messaging, social networking sites, podcasts, online video
sites, wikis, photo sharing sites and Second Life.
The survey also found that 34 percent of businesses still do not monitor
employee access to the Internet, suggesting that many organizations do
not understand the potential security threats of using sites and
services such as MySpace, YouTube, blogs, Web-based email and online
forums. While more than 73 percent of those surveyed felt that loss of
confidential data was the number one security issue in terms of priority
to the security of their organization, 51 percent are not aware if their
company has ever lost confidential information through social media
sites. The only security issue to rank higher than loss of confidential
data was viruses/worms (77 percent), yet 96 percent of companies are
already using anti-virus tools.
“Security is still misunderstood when it comes
to the use of the Internet, particularly the impact that social media
sites might have on security,” said Jon Lee,
CEO, Clearswift. “As important as protecting
confidential information is to an organization, the majority don’t
know if their employees are using blogs, forums, Web-based email or
other social media sites to accidentally or knowingly share important
information. Forty-one percent and 54 percent of companies allow their
employees to use blogs and forums, respectively, at work, while another
45 percent and 36 percent, respectively, don’t
have a policy on the use of such sites. The lack of policy definitely
concerns us, and demonstrates that there is still a long way to go in
educating organizations of the potential security risks of Web 2.0.”
In addition to virus, worms and losing confidential data, other security
issues that U.S. IT and business decision makers consider “high
importance” are:
-
Harassment in the workplace (58 percent)
-
Damage to company reputation (57 percent)
-
Spyware (54 percent)
-
Pornography in the workplace (54 percent)
-
Denial of service attacks (52 percent)
At the bottom of the list of security issues in terms of priority were
those related to social media, including security breaches via blogs and
security breaches via forums, which were tied for last, edging out “employee
time wasting” and security breaches via
instant messaging, and security breaches via Web mail.
“The results of the survey demonstrate that
education is going to be very important to help IT groups and business
decision makers to understand the security issues that arise as
employees are allowed to use social media sites without policies or
policy enforcement,” added Jon Lee. “Many
companies think that there is nothing they can do to prevent their
employees from using social media sites. The truth is, much can be done
in terms of monitoring Internet usage, enforcing policies, filtering
both inbound and outbound email, and preventing unfettered access to
sites where company information and security can be compromised.
Clearswift recognizes social media as a major security issue that should
take priority among today’s businesses.”
This is the second of two surveys relating to better understanding users
attitudes and corporate policies related to social media. The first
survey found that organizations are susceptible to data leaks through
social media sites, and these Web 2.0 sites put corporate information at
risk and drain productivity. It also found that nearly 43 percent of
office workers in the United States access social media sites and
services for personal reasons from their work computer several times
each day, with 51 percent spending one or more hours a week on the sites.
About the research
IT and business decision makers research was commissioned and conducted
by Clearswift. Total sample size was 939 adults. Fieldwork was
undertaken between February 13, 2007 and March 1, 2007. The survey was
conducted online.
About Clearswift
Clearswift simplifies content security.
Our products help organizations enforce best-practice email and web use,
ensuring all traffic complies with internal policy and external
regulations.
Our range of content filtering solutions makes it easy to deploy, manage
and maintain no-compromise email and web security for both inbound and
outbound traffic.
Clearswift is the only vendor to offer comprehensive, policy-based
content security in all three deployment methods: as software, as an
appliance and as a managed service.
All three platforms are designed to take the hassle out of securing
Internet traffic, with a clear, intuitive management interface;
automatic, 'zero-touch' updates; powerful reporting and common-sense
policy management.
Twenty years of experience across 17,000 organizations has helped us
raise security standards while simplifying security management at the
same time.
We've helped many of the world's most successful organizations use the
Internet with confidence and are committed to staying ahead of the
market and helping our customers defend against all emerging threats.
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