Biggest BYOD challenge: Protecting private data

November 29, 2012

The dirty secret of BYOD is that employees are giving up their personal privacy in exchange for the convenience of choosing their own phone and conducting life on a single device.

It’s all well and good to have that freedom, but there are ways to balance employee personal privacy with the needs of the company says, Apperian’s CTO Carlos Montero-Luque.

Montero-Luque says employees face two main challenges when they accept the BYOD bargain, and they might not even realize it.

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“The first is whether or not they are willing to give the company full control of their device. By allowing the company/IT department full control of their device, they’re giving permission for those departments to view their personal content, access it, delete it, or even become involved in any legal matters (e.g., discovery in a lawsuit),” Montero-Luque explained.

The second and less obvious concern is that the controls the company puts on your device could actually make the experience worse by slowing down the phone or reducing battery life. “Employees want to experience the device they bought in the same way they expect even while they are at work,” Montero-Luque said.

Given these limitations, why do employees even want to bring their own devices? He says it’s not all that complicated, actually.

“Consumers feel the devices they can choose from are better than those enterprises offer to them. Users are more comfortable with the devices they purchased, as they provide an overall better experience with perks such as the ability to upgrade software and apps as they becomes available.”

Employers also face a set of challenges when they allow employees to choose their own devices. Most obviously, there is the issue of how to manage a myriad of devices with different software and operating systems without compromising private information on the device. If you need to remotely wipe enterprise content, for example, there is no reason you should have to wipe out the photos, address book and personal texting history at the same time.

One way to solve this dilemma for both parties is to compartmentalize the enterprise data.

“Compartmentalizing enterprise data tries to solve BYOD issues for both companies and their employees by creating two separate personas. A corporate persona, including all corporate content, and a consumer persona, including all personal content,” Montero-Luque said.

He says it’s while it’s a step in the right direction, this approach creates two separate machines within a single device. He says this division of labor comes with the same issues you have when you carry two phones. You eliminate one of the devices, but you are essentially running two anyway, creating a similar problem by having to switch between the two personas.

He says instead of trying to create two devices in one, the compartmentalization should be done at the individual corporate item, ap,p or document level. This way the compartmentalization is invisible as possible to the user, but still effectively secures access and content.

“Instead of this traditional solution, the goal ought to be to allow employees to access their corporate content in the same way as they would access their personal content, with the same user experience and device capabilities, while at the same time, seamless to the user, providing the full level of security, privacy, access control, and auditing capabilities that remain, more than ever, absolute requirements for IT departments as the guardians of corporate assets and data.”

This approach, which not coincidentally is how Apperian helps manage BYOD devices, provides a single device with one user experience instead of two separate ones. It also enables the company to control the device at the back end and eliminate obsolete documents or to shut off access to enterprise content when an employee leaves the company or loses the device.

More specifically, Apperian uses an enterprise app store where employees can access sanctioned enterprise apps. “Because we enable the delivery of corporate assets to BYOD devices via an enterprise app store, we track every app and content delivered and this enables the administrator to track and erase each specific corporate asset from the device without touching personal apps and data,” Montero-Luque explained.

In the end there are a number of approaches that companies can take to protect data, but both employer and employees should understand the issues that come with BYOD — and should work together to find the best approach for your organization.

 

Thanks to Ron Miller is a freelance technology journalist, blogger, FierceContentManagement editor, and contributing editor at EContent Magazine Read Ron’s bio

Gartner predicts that by 2017 the Chief Marketing Officer will control the technology spend

July 18, 2012

The Wall Street Journal just posted this article in advance of IBM’s 2Q earnings announcement tomorrow, leading with this sentence: “Technology companies have found a new customer—the marketing department.”

The story goes on to highlight the fact that marketing organizations are increasingly taking the lead in technology acquisition, and that “Companies are de-emphasising traditional productivity tools like PCs and standard business software in favor of advanced programs that help them boost revenue, for example by tracking customers across channels and better targeting offers and advertising.”

In the Journal article, author Spencer Ante points out that Gartner recently predicted by 2017, the chief marketing officer will control more technology spending than the company CIO. Gartner estimates that around a third of marketing department expense budgets is devoted to purchases such as systems to manage customer relationships, predict customer behavior, and run online storefronts, and that the global spend on marketing software already rose from $20 billion to $25 billion over the past year.

Anyway interesting video below:


More Data, More Problems? Enterprise Data Protection in the Era of Big Data

July 2, 2012

The explosion of data available today has been both a blessing and a curse to enterprises in all verticals. The ability to collect, store, mine, and analyze huge quantities of data has changed the way that companies do business, providing a competitive advantage to those companies that can best leverage their big data. According to a report by Mckinsey Global Institute, “a retailer using big data to the full could increase its operating margin by more than 60 percent.” Such an advantage is hard to ignore. Yet the increased storage and use of this data increases the complexity associated with securing that data.

As concerns around data security grow apace with the adoption of big data mentality, some companies struggle to find the balance between collecting enough data to compete and ensuring that their business is not threatened by the likelihood of a compromise. Data protection remains a vitally important element. In fact as more data is collected and stored, data protection should become a more prominent concern for enterprises.

Big data can contain many different categories of sensitive data – customer data, corporate information, and even intellectual property. The vast majority of the data is in semi-structured or unstructured format. Both the quantity and the structure of the data bring with it concerns about security and close on its heels, performance. However, performance doesn’t need to be an issue when considering theencryption of big data. Technological innovations, such as IBM’s AES-NI, can help companies have their data and use it, too.

 

C24 and 2011

January 10, 2011

C24 had a fantastic 2010 with the company growing from 5 to 13 people and new clients being added almost monthly. The projected figures for 2011 will see the company go from strength to strength as we have added a number of experienced sales people and increased the depth of our product portfolio.

We recognise that we are in a competitive environment and that a number of our hosting and application delivery solutions that we offer are gradually becoming more commoditised, however when clients work with C24 it is not usually just about hosting an application it is about building their business with an organisation that cares about them. We recently received a great review on linkedin from a company that we regularly work with the following is the comments made: 

” WIthout a shadow of doubt C24 are experts in integration. I’ve known them to start a project cut over at midnight Friday and the main people then not take a break till Monday morning to insure a seamless transfer for a client. Going beyond the call of duty is standard for C24, the only surprise I ever get from them is the occasional, ‘we just can’t do it’ as it’s such a rare answer from them. Highly recommended company, people and processes.”  Brett Rowe, Sales & Marketing Director at TFM Networks Ltd Reading, United Kingdom.

Organisations do go to larger hosting companies and sometimes get great service, however if you are looking at hosting or would just like to seek some advice we would be more than happy to sit down with you and discuss your needs and give you an honest experienced recommendation.

Thanks for reading this blog and please visit again soon as we try to update at least 2/3 times a week with blogs based around technology that we are interested in. See you soon.


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