Alexandria, Va., October 9, 2012 - Email encryption is
designed to keep sensitive information safe but Federal
information security and email management professionals
say standard email is the number one way unauthorized
data leaves an agency. A new study by MeriTalk and
sponsored by Axway,
titled "The Encryption Enigma," looks at how Federal
information security and email management professionals
view email security and encryption issues.
A single Federal agency sends and receives an average of
47.3 million emails each day, averaging 1.89 billion
emails per day for the Federal government overall.
While 79 percent of Federal information security
and email management professionals say cyber security is
a top priority, only one in four give the security of
their current email solution an "A."
This is particularly troubling given that 83 percent of
Federal agencies provide users with the ability to
encrypt outbound email. Email is the number one way
unauthorized data, including classified and sensitive
information, leaves Federal agencies followed by
agency-issued mobile devices and USB flash drives.
In a number of cases, the very encryption that may
be used to ensure the security of information becomes the
tool for hiding sensitive information as it leaves
through the email gateway.
Most agencies (84 percent) believe that they are safe and
support the inspection of desktop-encrypted email.
However, to effectively support the inspection of
desktop-encrypted emails, agencies must:
-
Validate all email users;
-
Have proper email polices in place; and
-
Ensure users must follow correct email policies.
Currently, 47 percent of agencies cite the need for
better email policies and 45 percent report that
employees do not follow these policies. In fact,
even if these three conditions are met, agencies may be
unable to enforce email policies unless their email
gateways explicitly decrypt and scan desktop-encrypted
email.
"Email encryption is an important tool for protecting
sensitive information, but agencies must be sure that
encryption is not making outbound emails so opaque that
sensitive information can pass through without
detection," said Michael Dayton, senior vice president,
security solutions group, Axway. "Agencies
themselves may be providing the tools by which Federal
workers are leaking critical information - intentionally
or not."
Email encryption is a growing issue with 51 percent of
information security professionals seeing email
encryption becoming a more significant problem for
Federal agencies in the next five years. In
addition, 80 percent of information security managers are
concerned about the possibility of data loss prevention
violations encrypted in emails and 58 percent believe
encryption makes it harder to detect when valuable or
sensitive data is leaving the agency.
Furthermore, file sharing through email is another
collaboration tool that needs to be secure, especially
when the files being shared contain critical data.
The ability to enforce encryption of certain
documents in an automated way and also provide Federal
agencies with the ability to decrypt files is key to
ensuring secure file sharing through email.
Federal information security and email management
professionals say the top barriers to securing Federal
email are:
-
Lack of budget (46 percent);
-
Lack of employees adhering to security policies (45
percent);
-
The rise of mobile technologies (30 percent); and
-
Lack of training (29 percent).
To overcome these challenges, 55 percent of survey
respondents suggest improved end-user training and 54
percent suggest advanced email security technology.
"The Encryption Enigma" is based on an online survey of
203 Federal government information security and email
management professionals in June and July 2012.
To download the full study, please visit http://www.meritalk.com/encryption-enigma.
About MeriTalk
The voice of tomorrow's government today, MeriTalk is
an online community and go-to resource for government
IT. Focusing on government's hot-button issues,
MeriTalk hosts Data Center Exchange, Cyber Security
Exchange, and Cloud Computing Exchange - platforms
dedicated to supporting public-private dialogue and
collaboration. MeriTalk connects with an audience
of 85,000 government community contacts. For more
information, visit www.meritalk.com or
follow us on Twitter, @meritalk.
About Axway
Axway (NYSE Euronext: AXW.PA), the Business Interaction
Networks company, is a software company with more than
11,000 customers in 100 countries. For more than a
decade, Axway has provided leading organizations around
the world with proven technology solutions that
integrate, manage, secure and govern the
business-critical interactions that accelerate enterprise
performance. Our award-winning solutions span
business-to-business integration, managed file transfer,
business operations monitoring, process management, and
email and identity security - offered on premise or in
the Cloud with professional and managed services. Axway
is registered in France with headquarters in the United
States and offices around the globe. More information is
available at www.axway.com.