Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Content Privacy and Security in the WikiLeaks Era: Bridging the Gap Between Policy and Practice

Given the media phenomenon of WikiLeaks alongside widespread coverage of exposure of sensitive corporate information, more and more enterprises are waking up to the risks of unstructured content — both within their organization, such as internal SharePoint sites or other file shares, and on the Web.

Most large enterprises today have risk, compliance, and privacy policies in place to govern processes for access, sharing and storage of sensitive corporate information, yet as the growing number of public breaches can attest, policies alone are not the answer.

Given the explosion of online data via content management systems, social computing and other collaborative channels, organizations are asking if they truly understand the nature and composition of the digital content within their organization, and if they can validate whether or not that content is in compliance with regulatory and policy guidelines for privacy and confidentiality.

Your organization may never make it to the front page of the New York Times, but if private or otherwise sensitive information is exposed, either accidentally or as a result of malicious intent, the penalties to your business reputation and bottom line are significant.

This white paper explores the emerging mandate for greater corporate governance of enterprise content, and defines strategies for supporting a complete approach to content compliance management and the automation of critical audit, monitoring and enforcement controls.

FOR FURTHER DETAIL PLEASE DOWNLOAD THE REPORT:

 

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