Survey On Security Investment Trends
whoisjoe writes "Information Security Magazine has an interesting article (although it's in PDF) on the trends and effects of security spending by organizations.
Basically, organizations tend to spend less per machine as they grow, and the effectiveness of their investment tends to depend more on the share of the IT budget than the absolute amount."
Typical of major corporations to try and drive the bottom line by cost cutting in areas that in todays tech environment are probably the most dangerous over the long term. Of course when something happens its simple to blame human error and crucify the IT department for not doing thier job.
"Hollowpoints: When you care enough to send the very best."
The problem from the clients I've interacted with over the years has rarely been that they spend too much due to wanted X dollars per machine, but in their failure to realize that they too may be vuilnerable to threats that they think can't happen. As in many cases in this industry, the bulk of the problem lies about 20 inches in front of the screen. I've often found that some money spent on education is what is needed the most.
jX [ Make everything as simple as possible, but no simpler. - Einstein ]
Press release with summary of the article can be found...
Here
Some of the major findings of the Information Security Magazine survey include:
You can overanalyse data and get anything out of it. Stats are useful, but only in perspective. I wouldn't make any big decisions based on this survey.
For a start, 200+ does not an authoritative respondent base make. That's a relatively tiny survey, especially when you bear in mind that "2,196 practitioners completed some portion of the survey. The statistics in this report reflect responses from 215 qualified respondents"
So, 90% of respondents were invalidated. Why? Didn't fit the curve? Sure, you clean survey data, but when you're left with so few discrete results, any anomaly will look like a trend.
One other thought (or this'll turn into an essay): of _course_ security spending per user decreases with the size of the organisation. That's what "economy of scale" means!
The point that organisations tend to underspend IS true, but the predetermined conclusions of surveys like these aren't doing much to dispell FUD.
I'm not impressed. ISM should be doing a lot better than this. It's not all bad, but it's far from realistic.
All too often organizations will also trust the firewall to keep the company secure with WAY too little attention to keeping internal machines patched and up to date. Of course, this leads to a single point of failure, and if anyone makes it past the firewall it's a total free-for-all.
Hmmm. Only 215 "qualified respondents" that provided "reliable information". Then they divide them into small, medium, large, and very large sites. Assuming small networks outnumber large ones by a long shot, just how many "very large" networks (10,000+ machines) could they be getting results from?
Between the questionable statistics and the bizarre correlation between security and sex mentioned in the first paragraph, this article is nothing but a large serving of Buzzword Soup topped with noise and a sprinkling of anecdotal evidence, with yummy USA-Today-style pie charts for dessert.
It's Slashdot's evil twin... SlashNOT
...the effectiveness of their investment tends to depend more on the share of the IT budget than the absolute amount.
Perhaps businesses that spend a larger share of their IT budget on security give it a larger priority in general.
If there is hope, it lies in the trolls.
I wonder if anyone has ever hacked into google? I'm not talking about creating false high listings but actually cracking google's database itself. Getting their full internal Zeitgeist would be a target I assume, based on how usefull the extremely limited version they post each month is.
They do have an incredible number of machines all connected directly to the internet.
If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.