Distributed Denial of Service

Nemertes Benchmark: Security and Information Protection

Overview: 

It’s been a long time coming, but the indications are that security and information protection are finally within spitting distance of getting the mindshare they merit, based on the only metric that really matters: Cash on the barrelhead.

In volume 1 of our ground-breaking benchmark, "Security and Information Protection: Trends and Organizational Issues", we highlight the acceleration in spending on security and information protection, discuss critical drivers, and drill down into the organizational and operational impacts. Security budgets have grown another 20% since our last benchmark (in 2005), and indications are that double-digit growth will continue through 2008 and beyond. Moreover, that growth is increasingly shifting away from consultants and staff and toward products and services—good news for vendors and providers. Security organizations are evolving as well, with the most significant trend being the shift in focus from “chief security officer” to “chief risk mitigation officer,” mirroring the overall organizational shift in focus from security to risk mitigation. In line with this shift, security teams are picking up responsibility for areas they don’t historically support (such as business continuance and facilities) but which, if not well managed, can increase an organization’s risk. And security remains a great career path: along with this increased responsibility comes a welcome (and sustained) increase in salary.

Network World: Think Twice About New Security Gizmos

In a recent study about spyware by Nemertes Research, Senior Vice President Andreas Antonopoulos was surprised to find that 16% of the companies examined were not concerned about the threat.

Suspecting that was because they were small companies, he dug deeper, but found they were some of the largest companies analyzed. He also discovered why they weren't concerned: they spent 6% to 8% of their IT budgets on security, twice what the average company spends.