"The two overarching themes for compliance management in 2005 will be the
adoption of best practices and the accelerated focus on and use of IT." --Gartner
Research
Federal legislation targeting the dissemination of private information has forced
businesses in every industry to rethink how they communicate. The three primary
regulations, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) and Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) affect virtually every aspect
of an organization's information sharing practices, and complying with these laws
requires a new approach to communication as a whole. As e-mail has become the most
important communication tool for any organization, special care must be taken to
ensure that all messages sent or received are within the realm of legally appropriate
interaction.
Each of the three primary regulations affects a different area of an enterprise's
communications. The HIPAA and GLBA regulations are similar in scope, but differ
in their targeted industries; SOX differs in that it pertains not only to personal
information, but also to the integrity of financial reporting data. While the acts
differ from one another in their language, they all share one common attribute:
stiff penalties for those who violate them.
For email, most vendors have focused on content filtering and encryption technology
as a contributor to compliance. While both of these technologies are necessary for
ensuring compliance, relying solely on these tools does not provide adequate protection.
An effective approach to regulatory compliance must consist of multiple technologies
working together to:
- Accurately detect regulated material
- Dynamically act to prevent compliance violations in real time
- Protect not only messages but also users and systems
- Verify and demonstrate compliance through reporting and integrity checks
Detection The text contained within an e-mail message must be thoroughly
scanned in order to identify terms that could constitute a violation of the law.
Dynamic dictionaries of regulation-specific terms must be maintained and common
formats such as Social Security and credit card numbers must be identified before
the message leaves the e-mail gateway. File attachments present an additional risk,
as they can contain libraries of information that must also be handled in accordance
with federal guidelines. To neutralize the threat of file attachments, file attachments
must be verified based on their encoding, not just their extension. Archives such
as .zip files must also be thoroughly scanned in order to evaluate everything contained
in the archive.
Violation Prevention While identifying compliance violations is the first
step in the process of regulatory compliance, detection alone is insufficient. Knowledge
of a violation is important, but stopping the violation before it ever leaves the
gateway is imperative. A compliance solution that is deployed at the email gateway
ensures that no messages will leave or enter the organization without first passing
through the appliance. This ensures that the organization is not left exposed to
employee error or malicious intent, whether from outside the gateway or within it.
Organization-Wide Protection A total compliance solution must provide
defense for multiple levels of an organization's communication network, from individual
messages to the users who send and receive them, to the very systems that transfer
and store critical information.
Messages Automated and policy-driven encryption protects customer data
and ensures the integrity of financial data when in transit. A complete encryption
solution must be able to dynamically select the most appropriate encryption solution
based on the recipient's capabilities, including secure delivery to end users with
unknown encryption capabilities, as is often the case when using email to communicate
with clients in healthcare and financial services.
Users End users who send non-compliant information via e-mail through
unprotected gateways face the very real threat of job termination, lawsuits and
even prosecution, should their messages end up in the wrong hands. Regardless of
whether the user's intention is malicious or a simple mistake, an effective compliance
solution will ensure that no damage is done.
Systems Complete compliance requires an e-mail specific firewall and intrusion
prevention system. Gateway appliances designed to contribute to regulatory compliance
must be able to detect and block hacker attacks directed at the appliance itself,
as well as at the mail servers and other systems sitting "behind" it. Without this
level of protection, vouching for the integrity of information sent via e-mail is
impossible.
Monitoring and Reporting Compliance is not just about detecting and controlling
certain types of content. It also requires reporting and communication of compliance
status. Compliance officers and administrators must be able to easily access data
in order to:
- Analyze and improve the organization's compliance efforts
- Automatically deliver decision-making information to compliance officers
in a timely manner
- Easily generate executive-level reports instantly
Take the Next Step toward Complete Compliance The last thing your enterprise
needs is regulatory trouble, and the surest way to find it is by violating federal
legislation. To that end, IronMail's Compliance Control features best-of-breed policy
enforcement capabilities, giving compliance officers and executives the peace of
mind that comes with staying on the right side of the law. To learn more about how
IronMail can help your organization comply with the stringent rules surrounding
information privacy, download CipherTrust's free whitepaper, "Compliance Control:
Contributing to Corporate Regulatory Compliance."