Maximizing E-mail Security ROI Part V – A New Twist to an Old
Problem: Email Encryption by CipherTrust
This is the
last of a five-part series on Maximizing Email Security
ROI.
Throughout the ages, people have encrypted
communications to suit their information security needs.
In the
1st century B.C., Julius Caesar didn’t trust the couriers who carried his
messages to trusted acquaintances. So, he replaced every A with a D, every
B with an E, and so on, all the way through the alphabet. Only those who
knew Caesar’s shift-by-three rule could decipher his messages. Over 2000
years later, we’re still trying to protect our messages from prying eyes
(If you have not read CipherTrust's white paper on Privacy Architecture,
you can download
it free here).
In the Information Age, email is the primary
method of communication for businesses around the world. While email has
become a mission-critical application, it also raises important privacy
and security concerns. Sensitive personal and business communications are
vulnerable to the prying eyes of hackers, industrial spies and others who
would love to have access to information not intended for them. Because of
these risks, businesses are realizing the value of encrypting their email
communications to protect vital information while in transit from origin
to destination.
Asset/IP protection
Enterprises that fail to adequately
protect information in transit across the Internet risk revealing their
most vital secrets. Each unencrypted email exposes sensitive data – from
confidential financial and product information to legal contracts to files
that include personally identifying information such as Social Security
numbers, birthdates, credit card numbers and bank account numbers.
Failure to encrypt email communication is akin to sending a
digital postcard into cyberspace. Sure, there’s a chance that it will
reach its destination without crossing a snooping pair of eyes, but
there’s also a chance that it won’t. You wouldn’t send a postcard with
your vital trade secrets, financial data and customer information on it,
so why would you send an unencrypted email containing the same?
Compliance and Liability
State and federal regulations
targeting financial and personal data affect almost every enterprise, with
mandates to protect and secure all forms of information. While these
regulations rarely explicitly mention email, the laws are broadly written
and generally interpreted to cover email and other forms of electronic
communication.
Publicly traded enterprises, particularly those in
the banking and healthcare industries, must guarantee privacy and security
of customer or patient information in email by encrypting the message and
monitoring outbound email for unencrypted or inappropriate patient or
customer information. In addition to protecting private information
through policy enforcement, companies are responsible for protecting
private information while in transit across the Internet.
Failure
to encrypt confidential information that results in a violation of
regulatory policy can lead to steep corporate fines as well as possible
criminal charges, fines and jail time for company executives. In addition,
the company faces likely lawsuits from customers and patients whose
confidential information is compromised.
To help ensure security of
confidential information and compliance with regulations, businesses must
ensure that:
- Email messages containing confidential information are kept secure
when transmitted over an unprotected link
- Email systems and users are properly authenticated so that
confidential information does not get into the wrong hands
- Email servers and message stores where confidential information may
be stored are protected
Make Sure it’s Greek to Them
A comprehensive email
security approach including encryption is the most effective defense
against all external and internal threats. For more information on how to
encrypt information entering and leaving your enterprise email network,
download CipherTrust's FREE whitepaper, "Protecting
Email Privacy: Overview of IronMail Privacy
Architecture".
CipherTrust and The IronMail Insider wish you and yours a safe and
happy holiday season and all the best for a prosperous
2005!
About the Author
CipherTrust is the leader in anti-spam and email security. Learn more
by downloading our free whitepaper, "Protecting
Email Privacy: Overview of IronMail Privacy Architecture" or by
visiting http://www.ciphertrust.com/.
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