HOME  |  PROFILE  |  CONTACT US Wednesday  08 September, 2010
 

Security /  LANs & WANs /  Network Management /  Wireless /  Virtualisation /  Data Centre /  Cabling /  Servers and Storage /  Collaboration /  Case Studies /  Unified Communications
The changing security landscape in Mid East

I consider myself fortunate to have arrived early on the Middle East IT Security scene back in the early 90’s. The Security hype was just beginning to build up with vendors competing against each other to proudly display their wares claiming to be the next best thing on security.

Security
by Hidayath Ullah Khan Monday, January 05 2009

E-mail
Comments
Print 2803 views | 2 comments

Those days it was the centralized anti-virus consoles and the shiny new stateful-inspection firewalls hitting the ME market. The hoopla around it was just mind boggling.

In retrospect, having carried out several security audits, penetration testing and incident handling projects for nearly a decade now for many leading enterprises across the ME region, I still seem to be a bit intrigued at the speed at which the security landscape has changed and affected enterprises across the region.

As I recall, in the early days as security consultants we only had to deal with virus/worm outbreaks and Dos attacks. Though virus/worm outbreak still continues to be a prevailing issue with many enterprises in the gulf, primarily due to weak network designs but that’s an another topic to blog. Today as a consultant, I’ve personally seen the shifting trends in hacking - from the occasional virus/worm outbreaks to DDOS attacks to phishing to crimeware to botnets to email extortion threats, all of it happening here to enterprises in the middle east.

Enterprises today need to act fast to protect their systems, networks, applications and other resources. However, what still bothers me most is the lackadaisical attitude towards security issues practiced by many enterprises in the region.

Related content

Are you prepared for war?

Mirror, mirror on the wall, how safe are we?

Data security now 10% of IT operating budgets, Forrester says

Fighting threats on every front

Secure your network
Other articles under this section
Most organizations choose to handle security incidents by ignoring the problem completely. Most of them blindly believe that they did not have incidents in the first place and allow themselves to be lulled in to a bliss of ignorance. But as they say, ignorance is not always bliss, it’s dangerous and only a matter of time before an incident catches up.

As a matter of fact, we did noticed that most organizations have had a lot of security breaches even before we started auditing them, but since they failed to detect the security incidents in the first place they choose to ignore it.

Security Incidents do happen and can result in disastrous situations for the organization and only those organizations that are prepared for dealing with incidents can minimize the chances of a catastrophe and can get back to business in a fairly short period of time.

The age old adage, “chance truly favors the prepared mind” is especially true when it comes to dealing with security incidents. In the midst of an incident is not a wise decision to determine the course of action for your organization. If your organization is prepared and knows what to do then dealing with security incidents is pretty straight forward, if not it might result in many sleepless nights.

Preparation is of paramount importance and is very similar to insurance, you might not need it everyday but someday you will be thankful that you had it. It is imperative to prepare to make sure we have the resources and skills we need to deal with security incidents.


Author's Bio

Hidayath Ullah Khan
Hidayath Ullah Khan is the founder and CEO of Sentelist FZE – an IT consultancy firm specializing in Application Security, Penetration Testing and Forensics.

Contact Number: 971 6 5575599
Email: khan@sentelist.net
Tags

Security (262), Middle East (11)
E-mail
Print


Free Newsletters

Sign up and receive the latest news, reviews and trends on your favorite technology topics









Quick Poll

How many terabytes of storage does each storage admin at your company manage?






» View result
Comment

 

By Habeeb Altaf on 1/7/2009 8:44:14 AM
more on incident handling

By Ahmed Ansar on 1/7/2009 8:41:43 AM
Excellent, Like to hear more from you side


Screen Name 
E-mail 
Subject
Comment  
Enter code:
  

Most read


View more news



Most commented
Currently no comments have been submitted for this section.
View more news




Whitepaper

The Impact of the Carbon Reduction in Data Centres

Due to their high electrical power consumption, data centres in the majority of cases will be affected and it will prove difficult over time to reduce emissions and at the same time sustain expansion and growth. This paper is intended to provide a brief overview of the CRC, how it will affect businesses and how improvements to energy efficiency can be made with changes to the ICT infrastructure.
Next Generation Data Centre ICT Infrastructures

In addition to server consolidation and virtualisation, recent trends towards Service Orientated Architectures (SOAs), Web 2.0 applications and cluster computing are accelerating the implementation of unified network fabrics in order to cope with the higher I/O throughput and greater bandwidth needed to deliver these services.
Energy Savings with 10GBase-T and Energy Efficient Ethernet

Energy Efficient Ethernet is an emerging IEEE802.3az standard due to be ratified in 2010 and focuses on power savings when an Ethernet device is sitting idle.


View all whitepapers


Video Archive 

Copyright 2010 IDG Middle East. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of IDG Middle East is prohibited.