[5813] in cryptography@c2.net mail archive

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Internal vs external threats, any references?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Jeff.Hodges@stanford.edu)
Fri Oct 1 11:20:51 1999

Message-Id: <199909302017.NAA17015@Wind.Stanford.EDU>
To: cryptography@c2.net
From: Jeff.Hodges@stanford.edu
Reply-To: Jeff.Hodges@stanford.edu
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Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 13:17:02 -0700

A commonly-held conception in the commercial world (in my experience) is that 
most threats to "corporate security" come from the Internet-at-large, and 
therefore being behind a firewall is a Good Thing and generally Sufficient.

Of course there are many references in the literature which dispute that 
one-sided posture, and it is a reasonably commonly-held (again in my 
experience) amongst security weanies that just as many if not more threats may 
emanate from within one's organization (a university being an canonical 
example), but I haven't uncovered any references that directly cite evidence 
quantifying this perception.

Do any folks out there have any pointers to docs, study reports, whathaveyou 
that provide quanifiable evidence about either or both external or internal 
threats?

thanks,

JeffH




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