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Security
On Prison And Corporate Data Escapes
The New York Times ran a story late Saturday afternoon about how armed men dressed as Mexican federal police, walked into a jail within the state of Zacatecas and freed 50 inmates -- who are believed to be drug traffickers: The team of criminals who gained entry to the prison in Cieneguillas showed how vulnerable Mexican institutions remain. Authorities believe some prison guards and supervisors may have been in on the action. So what does a Mexican jailbreak from the northern part of the country, involving stolen uniforms, helicopters, and a boatload of gumption have to do with corporate data security? Plenty. Who in your organization would have the audacity to stop uniformed guards and ask for identification, and for them to provide the names, or a letter, substantiating the authority for them to be doing whatever they're doing? Such as wheeling boxes of data, hard drives, or whatever out the front door? Consider this recount, on Dark Reading, of a social engineering, physical security test on this security firm's client conducted by Bob Clary: The client also had moved into a new building and requested we test its physical security and social-engineer our way into the building to connect to the network. By leveraging the ability to be on the inside of the network, our vulnerability scanning and testing of its network security would be considerably more efficient. I don't care how much you invest in IT security. If your physical security is as open as this, and your employees don't bother to question anyone: you are as good as pwned. For my mobile security and tech observations, follow my Twitter account. « Cisco: Smart Grid's A $100 Billion Baby | Main | Why Facebook Wants A Virtual Currency » |
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