Corporations are under the gun to protect financial information and consumers
are watching!
Just a few weeks ago, one of the world's largest banks announced that it had
lost computer data containing the personal information of an estimated 1.2 million
federal employees, including some members of the U.S. Senate. The missing information
includes Social Security numbers and account data for government employees who use
the bank's charge cards for travel and expenses. In the aftermath of these revelations,
the ability of banks and other financial institutions to safeguard our personal
information has been called into question by consumers and government alike. Predictably,
we are beginning to hear the rumblings of additional legislation, but there have
been laws protecting consumer financial information on the books for years - laws
such as the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA).
The effect of this legislation and consumer awareness hits squarely on the issue
of email security. Customers receive their bank statements via email; bank officers
pass countless sensitive email messages back and forth to one another; financial
spreadsheets are included in email communication on a regular basis. This reliance
on email is bringing information privacy and security into the spotlight.
With international attention now focused on privacy and information security,
executives are scrambling to ensure that their enterprises are not only compliant
with the law, but that they also convey a sense of security to consumers who ultimately
vote with their pocketbooks. As an email security company, our interest is in understanding
how these issues affect an organization's email system.
The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act was signed by former President Clinton in 1999 and
made fully effective on July 1, 2001. GLBA requires financial institutions (including
banks, brokerage firms, insurance companies and tax preparation firms), as well
as all of their business partners and contractors, to protect the private financial
information that passes through their enterprises.
GLBA Requirements GLBA requires financial institutions and their partners to
make various information security best practices part of everyday operations. This
includes:
- Ensuring that email messages containing confidential information are kept
secure when transmitted over an unprotected link
- Ensuring that email systems and users are properly authenticated so that
confidential information does not get into the wrong hands
- Protecting email servers and network drives where confidential information
may be stored
Even without government regulations defining acceptable communication behavior,
financial institutions are faced with the need to protect confidential data and
keep their networks operational and secure. The consequences of a failure to perform
in any of these areas could have devastating effects on the business itself - potentially
causing existing and potential customers to lose faith in the company's ability
to protect their identities and financial information. If that doesn't strike fear
into your heart, GLBA provides for imprisonment of company officers and steep monetary
fines for non-compliance.
Components of GLBA Compliance There are five general sections of the "safeguards"
rule contained in GLBA. They outline, at a very high level, what to implement to
meet these requirements - not how to implement them. In fact, nowhere does the safeguards
rule mention specific technologies or products such as firewalls, encryption, and
content filtering that must be in place in order to contribute to compliance. However,
the use of each of these technologies is necessary in order to properly secure the
email gateway against compliance violations. On the same note, experience and time
have shown that technology alone is not an information security catch-all.
An effective information security program also needs specific policies and procedures
in place to assist with managing information risks on an ongoing basis. Once these
policies and procedures have been defined, the technology should provide automated
implementation, enablement and enforcement of them.
Obviously, no single email security component can be used to secure all information;
a solid information security infrastructure must consist of a combination of several
technologies:
- Firewalls and intrusion prevention systems accept or deny traffic into and
out of networks.
- Encryption ensures data integrity and confidentiality during transport across
the Internet.
- Content filtering monitors the conversations traveling into and out of the
network, scanning for terms that could indicate a violation of regulatory or
corporate policy.
- Attachment filtering provides inspection of files sent within email messages
to ensure that no confidential data is transmitted without proper safeguards
in place.
The need to establish centralized policy-based governance over the transmission,
encryption, and archival of sensitive information requires a secure gateway-based
solution. The solution should be capable of interfacing with all of an organization's
business partners regardless of the partner's technological capabilities, and it
should be transparent to the user in order to maximize the efficiency and utility
of email and encourage adoption of acceptable means of corporate communication.
IronMail: The Compliance Appliance The award-winning IronMail email security
appliance from CipherTrust is widely recognized as the benchmark by which all others
are measured. IronMail's Compliance Control allows organizations to set customize
policies to easily and automatically manage non-compliant messages as soon as they
are detected. Because Compliance Control is policy-driven, most functions are automated,
with exceptions handled directly by a decision-maker such as the compliance officer,
rather than by an intermediary such as a network administrator interpreting rules
made by another party. In addition, powerful reporting and monitoring tools give
executives and administrators access to real-time information pertaining to non-compliant
email messages.
To learn more about IronMail's Compliance Control and how it can help your organization
comply with the stringent GLBA legislation, download CipherTrust's free whitepaper,
"IronMail Compliance Control: Contributing to Corporate Regulatory Compliance".