Home > Security News > ISO 27001 could bridge the regulatory divide, expert says
Security News:
EMAIL THIS
QUESTION & ANSWER

ISO 27001 could bridge the regulatory divide, expert says

By Bill Brenner, Senior News Writer
11 Jul 2007 | SearchSecurity.com

Security Wire Daily News
Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us    Add to Google

Karen Worstell, former CISO at Microsoft and AT&T Wireless, recently joined the advisory board of Neupart A/S, a five-year-old European security risk management and awareness firm that just launched a North American office in the Seattle area. The company's specialty is promoting industry awareness of ISO 27001, a standard that defines the components of a security management plan to monitor, measure and control information security. As American businesses emerge from their Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA and Gramm-Leach-Bliley compliance projects, Neupart is hoping security pros are ready to take a fresh look at ISO 27001. In this Q&A, Worstell explains how ISO 27001 can be used to help companies comply with a variety of regulations and standards, and where her former employer, Microsoft, fits in.

You spent time as CISO at Microsoft. How are they doing on security today?
Karen Worstell: I have an outsider's view these days since I haven't been there for awhile. I know they have made substantial progress over the last six to seven years and I think the world sees that. If you look at things like the privacy rankings watchdog groups put in place, Microsoft is moving up and working hard on issues like identity theft. They have some of the most talented people in the business. They do have some work to do in breaking down some silos and working together across the company, and then they can really achieve incredible things in the security space. I have a lot of confidence in my colleagues who still work there.

Talk about how ISO 27001 could benefit IT pros in the U.S.
Worstell: The ISO 27001 standard is very successful because it is a holistic and integrated approach that breaks down silos that can be a barrier to security and quality. It's based on management systems and gets into how you build and operate things.

A lot of IT pros have been immersed in other regulations and standards and many have regulation fatigue at this point. Could that make Neupart's U.S. mission difficult?
Worstell: The complaint is that people are being regulated out of their profit margins. We have to deal with HIPAA, Sarbanes-Oxley, we have to deal with Safe Harbor if we deal with European companies, we have PCI DSS, and people say this is just onerous. They're right, but if you go about dealing with all this in silos, you will fail. You will never be truly compliant and be subject to legal liabilities down the road for representing controls that really aren't in place as being in place. ISO 27001 has a way of satisfying compliance requirements on all these various statures and regulations with just minor adjustments. It can help you comply with Safe Harbor, PCI DSS, SOX, and GLB. You build it once and comply many times and it can save millions of dollars and improve the security and control environment around your business. Art Coviello [president of EMC Corp.'s RSA Security division] said at the RSA conference a couple years ago that everyone thinks we put breaks on cars to go slow. But we put fancy breaks on really hot cars so they can go really fast. That's the control environment. To do business at the speed of light you need controls that let you know you are doing it safely and managing risk for the enterprise. The [controls outlined in ISO 27001] let you do things in a way that is streamlined and nimble.

ISO 27001:
Podcast: Security Wire Weekly:  Karen Worstell:  Former Microsoft CISO Karen Worstell talks about the current state of security. Download MP3

Download this excerpt from Chapter 10, Regulatory Compliance and ISO 27001

Read an excerpt from Nine Steps to ISO 27001 Success: An Implementation Overview
Art Coviello also says the security industry as we know it will disappear in three years as big IT companies acquire security vendors and build the breaks into the infrastructure, so to speak. Is that the way to go?

Worstell: I like the idea that security isn't a bolt on, integration is good, but I want to be able to integrate with choice. We can write a one-size-fits-all checklist and think every company can follow it, and that's where we can run into trouble with the built-in approach. Every company is different. So I'd love to see an integrated framework for the easy plug and play of technologies that best fit a certain niche. The difficulty providers have is that we as consumers aren't good at explaining what we want and need. One thing ISO 27001 can do is force us to be clearer and say, 'I need these kinds of features and I need them to be a certain way.' I was disappointed with the rollout of Vista to see the challenges they had delivering on the promise of two-factor authentication integrated across the infrastructure.

Do you think the problem there is that Microsoft has its own silos that need to be broken down?
Worstell: To successfully integrate two-factor authentication across the infrastructure, it has to work across all Microsoft's components -- Windows, Office, Exchange -- and for that to work all the different groups with competing priorities will have to work together to get this done. I see no threat on the horizon of people being able to deliver on this successfully. Even companies with the ability to make it happen are having difficulty. But they're trying.


Tags: Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA)HIPAAPCI Data Security StandardInformation Security Policies, Procedures and GuidelinesVIEW ALL TAGS

Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us    Add to Google



RELATED CONTENT
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA)
Implement security and compliance in a risk management context
The road to compliance
IBM to boost security spending, push PCI DSS program
Policies and regulatory compliance
Where hard drives go to die, or do they?
Compliance guide for managers: Lessons learned and best decisions
Become compliant -- without breaking the bank
Compliance Guide for Managers
Making sense of the maze
CSOs seek regulatory sanity in 2006
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) Research

HIPAA
Creating a HIPAA employee training program
FTC extends breach notification to Web-based health repositories
Are there guidelines to create a HIPAA-compliant data center?
HHS HIPAA guidance on encryption requirements and data destruction
Writing a patient identifier policy to prevent common HIPAA violations
HIPAA compliance: New regulations change the game
HIPAA compliance manual: Training, audit and requirement checklist
Key elements of a HIPAA compliance checklist
Quiz: How to meet HIPAA compliance requirements
How to avoid HIPAA Social Security number compliance violations
HIPAA Research

PCI Data Security Standard
Chip and PIN adoption
Chip and PIN adoption serves lesson for U.S. payment industry
Heartland CIO is critical of First Data's credit card tokenization plan
Heartland CIO on end-to-end encryption, credit card tokenization
Heartland CIO on PCI, E3 project
Wireless network guidelines for PCI DSS compliance
Visa probes tokens, encryption for PCI card data protection
Feds push cybersecurity jobs, PCI DSS changes ahead.
Voltage, RSA spar over tokenization, data protection
Experts, vendors search for PCI's holy grail

RELATED GLOSSARY TERMS
Terms from Whatis.com − the technology online dictionary
PCI DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard )  (SearchSecurity.com)

RELATED RESOURCES
2020software.com, trial software downloads for accounting software, ERP software, CRM software and business software systems
Search Bitpipe.com for the latest white papers and business webcasts
Whatis.com, the online computer dictionary




More Tips to Secure Your Network
TechTarget Security Media
Information Security View this month\\'s issue and subscribe today.
Information Security Decisions Apply online for free conference admission.
SearchSecurity.com
HomeNewsMagazineMultimediaWhite PapersLearningAdviceTopicsEventsAbout Us

About Us  |  Contact Us  |  For Advertisers  |  For Business Partners  |  Site Index  |  RSS
TechTarget provides technology professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs - from developing strategy, to making cost-effective purchase decisions and managing their organizations' technology projects - with its network of technology-specific websites, events and online magazines.

TechTarget Corporate Web Site  |  Media Kits  |  Site Map




All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2003 - 2009, TechTarget | Read our Privacy Policy
  TechTarget - The IT Media ROI Experts