Q&A: Good Technology CTO, Nicko van Someren
IDG News Service - Securing Good Technology's mobile device management (MDM) offerings while exploring future tech developments is CTO Nicko van Someren's top priorities. Speaking to CIO Australia during the recent Gartner Symposium/ITxpo on the Gold Coast, van Someren shared his thoughts on security and the changing role of the CTO.
What does your role as CTO involve?
The job of the CTO is to understand what the customers need rather than what they want.
My role involves understanding what the underlying problems are that we're trying to solve and what are the technologies that the end users don't know exist that we might be able to apply to solve those needs.
As CSO, what are the lessons you have learnt from attacks on companies such as RSA?
There are many lessons from each of these types of attacks. Just because you're a security company doesn't mean that your security is perfect.
RSA's issue had to do with a particular aspect of its business model, which meant it had to keep some secrets that are both valuable to customers and attackers.
We go out of our way to ensure that we don't have any secrets. For commercial reasons, we don't want people to get hold of our source code but if an attacker got hold of it, they wouldn't learn anything that would allow them to attack our products.
For example, we have a many layered process to ensure that bad people would not be able to insert malicious code into our products. We also have people on board who are employed to try and break the products we create. I think too few CIOs employ white-hat hackers internally. Part of that is that white-hat hackers don't tend to fit well with the corporate culture of big IT organisations.
Are groups such as Anonymous script kiddies or sophisticated hackers?
The thing with Anonymous is that you never know who they actually are. There are lots of script kiddies pretending to be associated with Anonymous.
I think these groups are misguided in the way they go about protesting against bad things in the world.
It's very easy to say that companies should have had better IT security in their organisation otherwise Anonymous wouldn't have got in. There is a sense that they are a bit of a grey hat organisation because they do often expose flaws in ways which are less catastrophic if any real bad guys exposed them for companies.
What's your advice to CIOs when managing MDM and bring-your-own-device (BYOD) programs?
CIOs should be asking what is the data that people need to access and what is going to be valuable for people to have access to- is it just email, document editing and file depositories or do we need access to business intelligence [BI] systems and customer relationship management [CRM] systems?
The CIO needs to look for applications that give them access to critical data in ways that set the policy about who gets access to that information, under what circumstances do they get access and what they can do with the data once it gets to the mobile device.
Hamish Barwick travelled to Gartner Symposium on the Gold Coast as a guest of Good Technology
Follow Hamish Barwick on Twitter: @HamishBarwick Follow CIO Australia on Twitter and Like us on Facebook... Twitter: @CIO_Australia, Facebook: CIO Australia, or take part in the CIO conversation on LinkedIn: CIO Australia
- The 20 Best iPhone/iPad Games of 2013 So Far
- 9 Steps to Build Your Personal Brand (and Your Career)
- 7 Consumer Technologies Coming to an Enterprise Near You
- 11 Signs Your IT Project is Doomed
- A walking tour: 33 questions to ask about your company's security
- 15 social media scams
- The 7 elements of a successful security awareness program
- IT Certification Study Tips
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Study Tip guide and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, cheat sheets, product reviews and more.
- Inquiry Spotlight: Consumer-Facing Identity The challenges of consumer-facing identity management, access management, and authentication differ in ways subtle and dramatic from those of the employee-facing variety.
- IDC Security Infographic From the Era Before security to this current era of empowerment this infographic from Blue coat provides a timeline navigates the rise of...
- Key Drivers: Why CIOs Believe Empowered Users Set the Agenda for Enterprise Security Several years ago, a transformation in IT began to take place; a transformation from an IT-centric view of technology to a business-centric view...
- Security Empowers Business Every magazine article, presentation or blog about the topic seems to start the same way: trying to scare the living daylights out of...
- Bridging HTTP and FTP with FileXpress Internet Server What if you could take an FTP server on your internal network, and allow external users (partners or customers) to securely access it...
- MFT and FileXpress - An Overview Business users and applications exchange files on a regular basis. File transfer is a core part of the flow of business activity. All Security White Papers | Webcasts
Rising salaries boost IT optimism, though not everyone is feeling upbeat. Our survey of 4,000+ IT workers shows who's riding the wave and why. Use our interactive tool and compare your own paycheck. Read more...