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Social security

By Rik Ferguson, solutions architect, Trend Micro.


Johannesburg, 30 Apr 2010

Enterprise social networking can take many forms: in-house wikis, blogging platforms, podcasts, vodcasts, or full-blown social networking platforms.

Jimmy Wales, co-founder of Wikipedia, famously described these as environments that “practise the philosophy of making it easy to correct mistakes, rather than making it difficult to make them”. This is the source of the discomfort within the enterprise when it comes to adoption of social networking.

Nevertheless, business seems to say enterprise adoption is coming whether officially sanctioned or not. Much as earlier technologies such as e-mail or instant messaging (or, if you can remember that far back, even the presence of a telephone on your desk) social networking platforms afford employees opportunities for communication and collaboration which are difficult to deny.

With hindsight, the benefits to business are clear. It is my feeling the same will be said of social networking and other collaborative platforms in the future.

Driving collaboration

Social networking can be, and is being, used to reach out to customers to solicit feedback on product launches in real-time, to proactively engage with less than satisfied customers and fix their problems, to create awareness of new social or commercial initiatives, and in many cases to forge entirely new commercial infrastructures as we see in the music industry.

Producers can dialogue directly with consumers and create a feedback loop that drives innovation and improves customer understanding.

Even mega corporations, such as IBM, have been engaging in their Innovation Jam using online collaboration tools since 2006, engaging tens of thousands of participants across the globe.

Talk is cheap

As Wales noted though, these platforms do not eliminate the possibility of mistakes; in fact, often their high public visibility and open nature could be said to exacerbate that possibility. An ill-considered remark in the confines of the office may be cause for disciplinary procedures, but it doesn't affect the company's external image in most cases.

An ill-considered Tweet though can generate pages of negative publicity and cause severe brand damage. Look no further than Vodafone at the beginning of February, or the Virgin Atlantic cabin crew who insulted their customers and questioned the cleanliness of their aircraft.

The examples above do not, of course, cover the full range of security considerations around social networking. Hijacked accounts, posting of confidential information, the ever-increasing popularity of Web 2.0 as an infection vector, shared passwords for shared accounts, the lack of audit trail, and time wasting all help fill out the portfolio a little.

ITWeb's 5th annual Security Summit

More information about ITWeb's Security Summit, which takes place from 11-13 May at the Sandton Convention Centre, is available online here.

Blanket bans will only serve to spur employees into creative ways around the company's roadblock, perhaps by using those risky “anonymous” proxies that spring up like mushrooms.

Even against the background of all those risks though, the possibilities for collaboration and communication between disparate but connected groups on varying platforms over great distances, plus the human desire for sociability, all mean social networking is coming to the workplace if it isn't already here.

It's up to you if you manage it, or cope with it...

* Rik Ferguson is a solutions architect at Trend Micro. He will deliver a talk on “Why in-the-cloud security technologies are the answer” at next month's ITWeb Security Summit, which takes place from 11-13 May at the Sandton Convention Centre.

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