IT managers see need for risk metrics
The pressure is on to prove security effectiveness
June 9, 2003 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
WASHINGTON -- Technology managers trying to justify and prioritize IT security spending are searching for some way to quantify the risk management benefits.
But a lack of standard processes and the wide variability of factors that affect risk are making it hard for companies to collect such metrics, users said last week at a conference here organized by Gartner Inc.
"There is an increasing focus on measuring security effectiveness," said Carl Cammarata, chief information security officer at automobile association AAA Michigan in Dearborn. Companies are realizing that "you can't manage what you can't measure."
Driving the trend is the fact that security budgets have been rising by 20% annually over the past couple of years, said Richard Hunter, an analyst at Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner.
"These have been pure costs, and CIOs and CEOs are asking what they are getting from all that [spending]," Hunter said. "If the response is, 'You are getting better security,' the next question is, 'How do you know?' "
As a result, security administrators are under growing pressure to find quantitative measures to demonstrate the efficacy of their security strategies.
"You need to have a baseline to measure against. If you don't have any measurements, you don't know where you are," said Gregory Waters, a senior information assurance engineer at TWM Associates Inc., an IT auditing firm in Fairfax, Va.
The numbers can come from a variety of sources. For example, said Gartner, a company could collect metrics on the number of attacks it faced during a specific period, the type of attacks, the percentage of attacks that were successful, the time that elapsed between the onset of an attack and when it was first detected, and the time it took to launch countermeasures.
The metrics could also relate to a company's overall risk profile based on an assessment of the vulnerabilities and threats faced by an organization and the countermeasures in place to deal with them.
Meaningful Metrics
Some vendors, such as Foundstone Inc. in Mission Viejo, Calif., and TruSecure Corp. in Herndon, Va., offer tools they say will help companies numerically score their risk on a sliding scale based on such assessments.
Used properly, such metrics can help security administrators give business managers a better snapshot of a company's risk profile, Cammarata said. At AAA, merely using statistics and benchmarks from organizations such as the SANS Institute in Bethesda, Md., and the Computer Security Institute in San Francisco no longer cut it, Cammarata said. "My managers want to know what these statistics mean to
Security
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