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Canada, Italy lead in mobile data loss

The bring-your-own-device trend has brought a lot of productivity and flexibility into many Canadian organizations but it has also spawned a serious security issue for a large number of businesses, according to a report recently released by Web-security firm Websense Inc.

The report titled Global Study on Mobile Risk, indicated that Canada and Italy are tied for the number one spot in losing the most corporate data through employee operated mobile devices. The survey, which queried key IT security personnel from 12 countries, found that 58 per cent of Canadian and Italian respondents admitted their business lost company data through employees using un-secured mobile devices such as laptops, smartphones, tablets and USB keys.

“We surveyed hundreds of IT security professionals, and mobile devices were overwhelmingly important to their business objectives,” said Dr. Larry Ponemon, chair and founder of the Ponemon Institute. “However, mobile devices put organizations at risk…It is also clear that employees are deliberately disabling security controls on these devices, and that is a serious concern.”

Data loss samplings by country

Key Canadian findings

“Mobile devices and the BYOD trend has always been a double edged sword. They enable productivity but they also come with risks,” said Fiaz Walji, Websense country manager for Canada. “Tablets and iOS devices are rapidly replacing laptops in the workplace, but the manners in which these devices are being used open the door to unprecedented loss of sensitive data.”

Websense recently released its new cloud-based service Websense TRITON Mobile Security solution. It combines four key components (web security, data security, mobile malware and app protection, and vital mobile device management features) into one solution. It can be used to manage iPads, iPhones, Android, and other mobile devices

The survey, Walji said, clearly shows that IT and security administrators are “overwhelmed.”

Nestor Arellano is a Senior Writer at ITBusiness.ca. Follow him on Twitter, read his blog, and join the IT Business Facebook Page.
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