IT pros say social media at work is good but risky: Survey
- 29 September, 2011 23:44
- Comments
Network security pros think use of social media at work is good for business, but also creates risks they don't have the tools to address, according to a Ponemon Institute survey.
Businesses are increasing Internet bandwidth to accommodate social media use even though those polled say that use is more often for non-business activities, according to "Global Survey on Media Risks," which was sponsored by Websense.
5 top social media security threats
The study surveyed 4,640 IT and IT security practitioners in the U.S, Canada, U.K., France, Germany, Italy, Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong, India, Brazil and Mexico with an average of 10 years experience. Fifty-four percent hold positions of supervisor or above, and 42% are employed by organizations larger than 5,000 employees.
Most respondents (63%) say use of social media puts the organization at risk, but only 29% say they have security controls in place to mitigate or reduce the risk, the study says.
About half (52%) say their organizations suffered increased virus and malware attacks as a result of employees' use of social media.
Most employees log more social media time for personal reasons than business reasons, with 59% using it 30 minutes per day or less for business reasons but 60% using it for personal reasons 30 minutes per day or more.
In cases where organizations have acceptable-use policies for social media, 65% say they're not enforced or they're not sure if they're enforced.
Most organizations (85%) allow social networking with friends inside the company, 55% allow it with friends outside and 54% say it's OK to use social media for emailing and texting.
The most commonly perceived downside of social media at work is diminished productivity, with 89% saying that already was or would be a result. Diminished bandwidth was cited by 77%, and 54% say loss of confidential information or violation of confidentiality policy was or would be a result.
The top five tools considered essential or very important to reduce risks caused by use of social media at work are: anti-virus and anti-malware; endpoint security; secure Web gateways; identity and access management; and mobile device management.
Read more about wide area network in Network World's Wide Area Network section.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
Apple aims iPads at High Schools
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Google Jumps Into Social Bookmarks Game
-
NBN build gaining momentum daily: Quigley
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
EMC 15-Minute Guide to Smarter Backup Transform your future
Backup and recovery has become fundamental part of business and an essential element of information management. Information is useless to customers, employees, or business partners can't access it when it is needed. Availability and integrity of information, of the lack of, can directly impact revenues and profits - as well as company reputations. Read more. -
Stopping Fake Antivirus: How to Keep Scareware off Your Network
This paper provides insight into where fake antivirus comes from and how it is distributed, what happens when a system is infected with fake antivirus, and how to stop this persistent threat from infecting your network and your users. -
Oracle x86 Rack Servers Optimized for Rapid Deployments and Operational Efficiency
Business-critical and mission-critical workloads demanding applications and databases require stable and secure environments. When these types of workloads are deployed on x86 servers, the need to ensure business continuity, maximum uptime, and consistent processing means that IT managers and business unit managers are looking at enterprise x86 servers in a new way: They realize that the business depends on these servers and that x86 server platforms for the enterprise are no longer expendable, as they might have been when servers were dedicated to a single application or when they were deployed as small Web servers that could be easily taken offline and replaced.

















Comments
Post new comment