Back in 2007, ESG asked 206 IT security professionals to respond to the following statement: “Desktop security has become a commodity market with little difference between products.” As expected, 58% of respondents either strongly agreed (17%) or agreed (41%) with this statement. In other words, it really didn’t matter whether you ran Internet security tools from Kaspersky, McAfee, Microsoft, Sophos, Symantec, or Trend Micro; all would be equally effective.
ESG hasn’t re-visited this question since, but many anecdotal conversations with IT security professionals lead me to believe that nothing has changed. If anything, more people believe that endpoint security tools are a commodity today than four years ago.
In my opinion, this perception is not only wrong, it could also be dangerous. Why? For one thing, threat vectors have changed. The main threat vector today is the web and the primary target is the browser. In addition, traditional antivirus signatures have been joined by other defense-in-depth safeguards, like behavior-based heuristics and cloud services, to protect endpoints. Finally, there are the endpoints themselves. In 2007, the term “endpoint” really meant a Windows PC. Now it could mean a Mac, iPad, or some type of mobile device like a Blackberry, Droid, or iPhone.
Given these changes, CISOs should really take a hard look at their endpoint security tools before signing off on a new subscription. During this assessment, examine endpoint security tools in terms of:
The main point here is that far from commodity products, the endpoint security tools used could mean the difference between business-as-usual or a costly security breach. Choose wisely.
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Tags: Antivirus, Blackberry, Droid, endpoint security, ESG, Firewall, iPad, iPhone, Kaspersky, Mac, Macintosh, McAfee, Microsoft, mobile phone, PC security, Security. anti-spyware, Sophos, Symantec, Trend Micro, Windows
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