Did The Wall
Street Journal sabotage businesses
by publishing tips on
how to circumvent IT?
TechRepublic's
Jason Hiner characterizes the The Wall Street Journal's tips
for circumventing IT as dangerous and irresponsible and says
that many of them could have very negative consequences for
businesses, IT departments, and users.
Tech Sanity Check
by Jason Hiner,
Executive Editor
Date: August 3rd, 2007
In the Monday, July 30 edition of The
Wall Street Journal, there was a special section on technology
that led with the article "Ten Things Your IT Department Won't
Tell You" by Vauhini Vara. If you haven't read the article,
you should take a look because some of your users may have
have already seen it, and as a result they may be engaging in
activities that put themselves and your IT department at
risk.
Here is the list of
the 10 items in Vara's article:
- How to send
giant files
- How to use
software that your company won't let you download
- How to visit the
Web sites your company blocks
- How to clear
your tracks on your work laptop
- How to search
for your work documents from home
- How to store
work files online
- How to keep your
privacy when using Web email
- How to access
your work email remotely when your company won't spring for
a BlackBerry
- How to access
your personal email on your BlackBerry
- How to look like
you're working
- Vara breaks down
each item into four sections — The Problem, The Trick, The
Risk, and How to Stay Safe.
Make no mistake,
this article was extremely popular. The Wall Street Journal
publishes its list of the Most Viewed and Most Emailed
articles on WSJ.com for each day, and for July 30, "Ten Things
Your IT Department Won't Tell You" was one of only two
articles that made the top five on both lists. It was No. 1 on
both.
Sanity
check
The problem is that the information in this
article is unequivocally damaging for businesses and their IT
departments, as well as for the users that The Wall Street
Journal is supposedly trying to serve.
While I am
generally a fan of The Wall Street Journal — and their tech
coverage is typically rock solid — I was very disappointed by
this piece. Although it did not reveal any information that
couldn't be found elsewhere, I don't like the fact that the
Journal spoon fed a bunch of dangerous tips to users and all
but encouraged a quiet revolt against the IT
department.
A few of Vara's
tips are fairly innocuous, such as "How to send giant files"
and "How to clear your tracks on your work laptop." In fact,
many IT pros could pass those items to users along with some
tips of when and how to use them. The large file issue can
ease the burden on e-mail attachments and storage and the
"clear your tracks" tip can be turned into a good privacy and
security practice.
However, several of
the other tips are dangerous to the point of idiocy,
especially "How to use software that your company blocks,"
"How to visit Web sites your company blocks," "How to search
your work documents from home," and "How to access your work
email remotely when your company won't spring for a
BlackBerry."
The issue of
showing users how to access software and sites that the
company has filtered is a recipe for disaster. Often the stuff
that is banned is banned because it can introduce spyware and
malware to the system or it can bog down the computer and/or
the network. When users find ways around that, they introduce
significant security and privacy risks to the company and they
can potentially decrease their own productivity by clogging up
their machine with spyware and adware.
In terms of "How to
search your work documents from home," Vara recommends using
Google Desktop to sync documents between a work PC and a home
PC. That might be okay for a few consultants and small
businesses, but it's a terrifically bad idea for anyone in the
corporate world (The Wall Street Journal's core audience). The
implications for privacy, confidentiality, and compliance are
severe and very serious, especially if any of the files
involved contain customer or financial data. Plus, there are
easier ways to handle the issue that preserve security, such
as a VPN connection and Remote Desktop from a home PC to a
work PC.
And then there's
the issue of "How to access your work email remotely when your
company won't spring for a BlackBerry." Forwarding work
e-mails to personal e-mail accounts and devices — as the
Journal article advises — is another potential disaster
waiting to happen. It raises the same issues of
confidentiality and compliance because when you forward all
mail, it is very likely that you'll end up sending customer
data and corporate financial information to your personal
accounts.
While the Journal
article ostensibly shows some responsibility and restraint by
including sections on "The Risks" and "How to Stay Safe" for
each of the ten items, the author either does not fully
understand all of the security and compliance risks involved
or simply chose to make light of many of them. Either scenario
is a strong indictment against the article.
The compliance
issues, while mentioned in the article, are much more serious
than Vara seems to realize because they can expose a company
to major financial risk (in the form of fines, lawsuits, and
legal fees). Likewise, the security issues are much more
serious than the Journal article presents them. Hackers have
gone professional (and in some cases joined forces with
organized crime) and are out there looking for employees and
companies to steal data from and use for blackmail or money
laundering. The TJX security scandal could serve as a sober
warning to that effect, once all of the details come to
light.
While users often
get frustrated with the IT department and the restrictions
that it puts in place, the answer is not to train people how
to make an end run around IT. In many companies, there's
already too much of a disconnect between IT and the rest of
the organization because of the fact that IT often plays the
role of a policeman — to serve and to protect.
The root problem
that The Wall Street Journal was trying to address is that
many users want and need to do some personal computing on
their work machines and/or access work apps and data from
their home machines or devices. That's a reality that
businesses and IT must face and must come up with some
workable solutions.
Since many of
today's users access their e-mail and work during "off hours,"
it's certainly reasonable that they should also be able to do
a little bit of personal computing during company time. There
simply needs to be a safe and relatively easy way for them to
do it. Some companies have solved this with separate virtual
machines, using VMware or Virtual PC or a Web-based solution
like G.ho.st. Other solutions need to be explored and big
players such as Apple and Microsoft, as well as small vendors
with creative solutions, need to all be involved. This will be
an important part of the next generation of operating systems,
devices, and a borderless information security
strategy.
For The Wall Street
Journal, which depicted itself as a "public trust" during its
recent acquisition tug-o-war with News Corp, fueling a turf
war between IT and its users is not the kind of journalism
that meets the high mandate that it has set for
itself.
For IT departments,
the genie is out of the bottle on many of these tips and
tricks that allow users to circumvent IT procedures. As a
result, IT departments need to aggressively partner with
employees, educate them on the severity of security and
compliance risks, and find ways to meet the needs of users
whose computing experience now overlaps between work and
home.
What do you think
about The Wall Street Journal's list? How do you think IT can
help users bridge work computing and home computing while
still maintaining data
security?