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Often companies go the extra mile to protect
their production data from internal hacking and unauthorized access. However,
development and test systems can be biggest security holes because no one thinks
there is any valuable data on them. Generally, this is because the information
is "old". This unsecured data can be copied, downloaded, and sold to competitors
or identity thieves.
Security auditing on many systems is often never
turned on or reviewed unless there is a problem. This is ironic because it is
difficult to know you have a problem with security with security auditing turned
off.
The best defense you have is to make sure auditing is turned on for all systems
and go back periodically to insure that no one has turned it off. Often system
administrators will turn off auditing (against company policy) due to pressures
from upper management.
Upper management doesn't want to take the minute performance hit from logging.
Usually the real culprit is the fact their systems are under configured and the
applications are poorly written. The systems administrators don't want to get a
poor rating on their annual customer satisfaction survey.
This can lead to security breaches that go on undetected for extended periods of
time. Output the security data into an Access database and identify the profiles
or accounts that have significant login failures.
Government regulators, stockholders, or your employees would not be
understanding if their personal information was compromised or valuable
corporate data was stolen.
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