nCircle.com >> nCircle Blog >> Sync

« RSA Opens - Show Me The People | Main | The Obama Administration’s Cyberspace Policy Review Turns Up a Dud »

RSA Panel Review - Macs in the Enterprise

Managing IT for a software company has its challenges. For me, the lines between efficiency, security and innovation are difficult to draw at a company like nCircle where engineers require some freedom to perform their best. The panelists at the RSA session "Responding to the ignored threat - Macs in the Enterprise" seemed to face the same kind of problems I do.

Based on the war wounds of the speakers, enterprises continue to find challenges when they try to bring Apple products into their security fold. Each of the enterprises has the usual defined security policies and on a daily basis they weigh the risks associated with "grey " areas against the productivity of their users. Today's hot topic was the largely ignored impact of Apple products on security practitioners working hard to reduce enterprise risk.

At Universities the Mac population has been on a significant increase and nearly 50% of all users, students and facility, use Macs. In addition to the Mac, nearly all users either have or want an iPhone. Both these devices make enterprise security problems more daunting. Try telling your new employee he can't have his favorite productivity tools because of security issues.

The panelists each discussed their current environments along with the trends and challenges they face with the Mac, and with all end points. A common opinion among the speakers was that the ease of use built into all modern computers, and especially Macs, have made users less knowledgeable and this is a bad thing for security. A naïve user is more likely to fall victim to attacks like phishing. A naïve user, with a burning desire for Apple products with their inherent lack of centralized management tools spells trouble.

Panelists offered a number of suggestions for tackling these issues. At Baylor, they are actively working hard to deploy Open Directory so that IT security can set basic end point security policies like screen saver passwords and control over patching cycles. At the University of Georgia system, the security team has put a significant emphasis on training. This teams holds brown bag sessions monthly, sends out newsletters and other communication tools help them increase awareness and reduce overall risk.

Sadly, it was evident from the discussion that Apple's continued reluctance to provide enterprise security tools is still causing heartburn for security professionals. Apple has yet to deliver anything on par with the policy systems Microsoft has built into Active Directory.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blog.ncircle.com/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi/337

Comments (1)

It was even just today that members on my team referred to our isolated bastion of Mac users "second rate systems." Not because of anything Macs do themselves, but just because they're largely unmanaged and nearly unmanagable to any scalable degree.

I've also found that, either because of lack of management or because of the personality of Mac owners, they are far more prone to violate policies like P2P, web mail, USB devices...

I'm glad we only have about a dozen, but those dozen account for a large amount of headaches and squabbles.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

Verification (needed to reduce spam):

Bio

Blog: Sync
Author: Andrew Storms

As nCircle's Director of Security Operations, Andrew Storms is responsible for the definition and enforcement of the company's security compliance programs as well as overseeing day-to-day operations for the Information Technology department.
Andrews' commentary on IT security issues has appeared in CNBC, Forbes and The New York Times, as well as many other publications. He is a Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP) and a member of FBI InfraGard.

About

This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on April 22, 2009 12:02 PM.

The previous post in this blog was RSA Opens - Show Me The People.

The next post in this blog is The Obama Administration’s Cyberspace Policy Review Turns Up a Dud.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.