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Information technology is strategic to enterprise
growth. However, paradoxically, it comes with a bagful of
potentially crippling risks that can threaten the very survival
of the enterprise. Today, information assets have to be protected
with the same level of commitment and vigilance that the management
devotes to financial supervision and overall enterprise governance.
It is no longer enough (nor has it ever been) for the board
of directors to ensure that IT investment delivers value and
enables the business. They must also ensure that the investment
encompasses what it would take to mitigate the risks that
may arise from its deployment.
The driving force
The board's diligence to the cause is reflected in the creation
of a 'Security Program Policy' that is promulgated to drive
the enterprise''s security initiative. This policy sets strategic
organizational directions for security, and assigns resources
for its implementation. It describes why the security program
is being established, assigns the CEO the responsibility for
program implementation, and authorizes disciplinary actions
for non-compliance.
Zeroing in on issues of concern
The basic objective of the enterprise security program is
to protect information assets. Risk management identifies
those assets, assesses the risk potential, and estimates the
possible damage, in case the risks are realized. Based on
the results of the risk analysis, and corroborated by the
broader directions charted in the security program policy,
a more detailed level of policies is put in place, focusing
on specific issues of concern to the organization. Among others,
these policies would typically relate to issues concerning
the Internet, email, incident response, contingency planning,
physical emergencies and anti-virus, which would be prepared
by the CIO, in coordination with other senior functional managers,
and signed off by the CEO.
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Spotlight on IT systems
Issue-specific policies address ''policy'' from a broad level,
usually encompassing the entire organisation. These would
not adequately cover issues closer to computer networks, applications,
and data. For example, these are not meant to provide in-depth
information or direction that could be used in establishing
an access control list in a router. System-specific policy
fills this need. It is much more focused, since it addresses
only one system, and delves deeper into finer areas. These
policies are usually prepared by the IT department/CIO and
signed off by the CEO. Typical system-specific policies could
be related to deployment of firewalls, employment of access
control technologies, protection of databases etc.
Implementing policies on the ground
Security policies do not provide direction or guidance on
how to initiate an action on the ground. These simply dictate
that a certain goal be accomplished, akin to high-level directions
emanating from headquarters to the troops. Policy can be likened
to the Constitution. The Constitution doesn't provide details
like Income Tax exemptions or penal codes, but underpinning
it are the numerous Acts and rules of law for it. Similarly,
underpinning the security policies are baselines, standards,
guidelines and procedures that provide detailed information
and directions on how to implement policies on the ground.
Baselines specify the minimum-security requirements for a
system, from which standards, that either equal or exceed
the minimum-security requirements, are developed. Standards
specify how hardware/software products should be used, thereby
enforcing organization-wide uniformity in deploying technology
and processes. Guidelines recommend actions when standards
either do not exist or cannot be applied to a non-routine
system or process. Procedures are the lowest in the policy
chain that detail step-by-step actions to implement the statements
in policies, standards, and guidelines.
Are you secure with security policies?
So, is an organization secure if it develops a comprehensive
set of information security policies? While, worldwide, there
is a clear correlation between security policies and effectiveness
of security measures in the organization, the CII-PwC Security
Survey 2002 illustrates otherwise. Amongst those Indian enterprises
that have a formal security policy (comprehensive or written
security policies), the effectiveness of security on the ground
was found to be very low, with 60% diffident about the effectiveness
of their security, and 17% exhibiting insecurity, in spite
of having a security policy in place.
In the Indian context, reasons for the astonishing contradiction
are quite clear. Almost half of the number of organizations,
with comprehensive security policies, has not conducted risk
analysis before developing its security policies, indicating
a downright lack of understanding of the security policy process.
Besides, it is not uncommon to find organizations putting
into place security policies, not for managing their information
risks, but to comply with regulatory pressures like, for instance,
the RBI guidelines that stipulate requirement of security
policies.
Other significant causes that have doomed failure of security
policies in Indian organizations include not classifying data
as per its sensitivity before initiating policy development,
force-fitting security policies picked from the Internet or
other sources into the organization, not conducting end-user
security and policy awareness programs, not monitoring compliance
of IT security policies, not reviewing security policies periodically,
and IT departments issuing security policies in a bottom-up
approach, without relating them to business imperatives and
obtaining top-management commitment.
Policy supervision
Merely developing security policies is futile if these are
not effectively implemented and managed. Policy management
ensures that security policies, standards, guidelines and
procedures are disseminated across the organization. This
is vital because, no matter how well thought out and comprehensive
the security policies are, if people don't know about them,
they will be useless. Once a security policy is in place,
the organization must have a way to determine if the policy
is being followed. Security violations must be investigated
to ensure non-recurrence. Issue-specific and system-specific
policies need to be reviewed periodically to keep in time
with constantly evolving circumstances across business and
technology.
The bottom line
Policies, that are well written, effectively communicated
and consistently enforced, go a long way towards protecting
organizations from IT-related risks. Without security policies,
an organization runs the risk of being misunderstood by its
employees, making it difficult to leverage disciplinary measures
if a security violation occurs. Security policies can also
help mitigate organizational and personal liability, and minimize
abuse of computing resources. A comprehensive security policy
provides intrinsic value and strategic advantage to the organization
by enhancing its credibility and bolstering confidence among
customers, partners, and stakeholders. Implemented and managed
effectively, a security policy can visibly increase ROI on
the security investment.
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