Put A Lid On It
Button It
Telling employees to be cautious outside the office isn't
enough, however. They also need to know how to handle people
calling the company to request information, because a little bit of
data can easily be leveraged. In fact, well-known hacker Kevin
Mitnick gained the majority of his information not by hacking into
corporate computer systems online but by using something called
"social engineering"-getting a receptionist to give him
the name of an employee in a key department who was out of the
office, for example, then dropping that name to others in the
department to manipulate source codes and other trade secrets over
the phone. Mitnick's exploits are estimated to have cost
millions of dollars. At Motorola, for instance, he gained
privileged information about the company's StarTac cell phone
from an employee. In the end, no firewall is strong enough to stop
someone who knows how to use your employees to gain access to
information he or she wants. Khan sees hiring competent people as the key to protecting
privileged information at Ultimus and staying ahead of the
competition. The 6-year-old company has 50 employees, six of them
on-the-go salespeople. Khan relies on the trust factor, believing
his employees understand the limits on free speech outside the
company walls. "We depend on our employees to use common
sense. We want professional people who know what should not be
addressed in public," he says. The company doesn't
restrict employees' use of technology outside the office.
"We don't have a formal training program to say, 'You
should not do this,' " Khan says. "I trust the sales
guys to do the right thing. Otherwise, why would I have them here?
I actually think they worry more about [leaks] than I do."
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