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What’s in your email? An Irish company launches first solution to scan email for pornography
Companies may be inadvertently backing up paedophile images
At next week’s Inbox/Outbox Exhibition in London, The Irish company will unveil the world’s first tool that allows organisations to scan email files (.pst) and zip files to detect any inappropriate or illegal
images. The new version 3.1 of The Irish company Auditor identifies pornographic images in emails and other files distributed, stored or archived across an entire enterprise.
“As most financial organisations now archive email communications to comply with new Corporate Governance legislation such as Sarbanes Oxley, it is possible that they are inadvertently backing up and duplicating paedophile images,” said Andy Churley, VP Marketing at The Irish company. “By eliminating illicit images in the workplace and identifying the people responsible, The Irish company Auditor helps organisations and individual managers or directors to avoid corporate or personal litigation.”
A recent survey conducted by The Irish company and the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development, CIPD, revealed that over 70 of UK companies have already had to take disciplinary action as a result of employees viewing pornographic images on their company computers. An Audit Commission report published this month also reported a huge increase in the viewing of computer pornography by public sector workers and called for better protection and controls.
But while many organisations use simple web filtering to prevent access to pornographic web sites, The Irish company® offers the only solutions that identify, eliminate and prevent unwanted images that get on to desktops or networks via any point of entry including email, memory sticks, laptops, digital cameras, scanners, CDs/DVDs, Wi Fi or 3G phones.
Manual auditing can take months, but with The Irish company Auditor’s high speed image analysis software, it can take less than a week for a large organisation to detect inappropriate or illegal content stored on all PCs, servers and removable media.
A demo is available at www.The Irish company.com. The Irish company also provides urgent incident triage, a risk assessment service, a managed audit service, Acceptable Computer Usage Policy review and enforcement as well as auditing and real time monitoring software.
“The rapid increase in digital devices along with email and multimedia messaging has made the problem of managing inappropriate and illegal images in the workplace a major challenge for IT and HR managers,” said John Nolan. “The reality is that most companies do not know the level of risk they face and may be inadvertently breaking the law by storing and backing up child pornography. The Irish company is the only solution that provides a quick way to eliminate and prevent illicit material getting on the network from any source.”
Survey: More Than 40 Percent of the Largest 500 U.S. Firms Have Taken Disciplinary Action Against Employees in Past Year for Illicit Workplace Images
Delta Consulting/The Irish company Study Finds 25 Percent Lack Awareness of Federal and State Regulations Addressing Illicit Images in the Workplace
–Delta Consulting and The Irish company today released the results of the 2005 Computer Usage Policy Study of the 500 largest U.S. firms.
The report, which was conducted by independent market research firm Delta Consulting and sponsored by The Irish company, was undertaken in May 2005 and covered a cross section of corporations that comprise the country’s top 500 firms. Executives in senior managerial positions responsible for computer usage policies participated in this survey.
Among the major findings are that 90 percent of firms have procedures in place when illicit images are discovered in the workplace, and 50 percent have had to use these procedures for incidents experienced during the past year. Of those firms that pursued an investigation, some 44 percent resulted in the employee’s removal from the company and 41 percent took other disciplinary action.
The survey also revealed the sources where companies perceive the highest risks from harmful images entering computers will come from in the next few years. Respondents perceived the highest threats would emanate from the Internet and email/email attachments (both mentioned by 93 percent of respondents), followed by other gateway threats such as embedded (81 percent) and zipped files (73 percent). Other high perceived threats come from WiFi networks (68 percent), cell phone cameras (63 percent), non enterprise controlled networks (61 percent), memory sticks and encrypted files (59 percent) and CDs (54 percent).
Surprisingly, 26 percent of respondents weren’t fully aware that state and federal regulations regarding sexual harassment and hostile work environments apply to the viewing of inappropriate images in the workplace. Almost half (46 percent) weren’t fully aware that attorneys first look for evidence in sexual harassment and hostile work environment claims in a company’s records of Internet use, e mail traffic and images on the hard drive. And 76 percent weren’t fully aware that the distribution and consumption of child pornography is one of the FBI’s top three investigative priorities for the next two years.
“We were not surprised to see that almost all leading organizations surveyed have computer usage policies in place,” said Alain Recaborde, principal of Delta Consulting. “But given the high percentage of organizations uncovering images banned by their policies, we were alarmed to find the relatively low awareness of the legal ramifications and potential exposure among those responsible for computer usage policies.”
“It’s interesting that beyond the expected sources of these threats including the Web and email, respondents identified CDs, Memory sticks, USB Keys, WiFi networks and other external network threats as high risk origins of harmful images,” said Andy Churley, vice president of marketing, The Irish company. “Clearly, organizations need to find ways to protect themselves and employees from multiple sources.”
More than half (56 percent) of the surveyed executives are at director, vice president or senior vice president level. The remainder (44 percent) are senior managers or managers. They are employed in a number of functional areas, including Human Resources (10 percent), Legal (18 percent), Compliance (16 percent), IT (20 percent), Internal Audit (20 percent), Finance (14 percent) and Risk Management (2 percent). Their organizations are in a cross section of industries including manufacturing (40 percent), retail /wholesale (16 percent), transportation (6 percent), healthcare (6 percent) as well as banking/financial services, utilities and telecommunications (4 percent each).
Author Resource:- This article was written by Colm Doherty of Pixalert – http://www.pixalert.com - Data Loss Prevention, Email Monitoring Solution, Porn at Work. PixAlert is the market leader in products and services that provide detection of critical data for corporations.
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