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Security Business
Intelligence IT professionals fail to protect smartphones
By Matthew Sparkes
Posted on 24 Jun 2009 at 13:01
Security professionals are barely better than the general public at keeping data on their smartphones safe, shows a new survey.
More than a third of IT workers who responded admitted they do not use a password on their work or personal smartphones,
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This is only marginally better than the public at large, 40% of whom don't bother to password-protect their phones. The lack of security has been blamed on "password fatigue".
Four out of five admitted that their phones contained business contacts' names and addresses, while around a quarter said that business emails were also stored on their phones.
Worryingly,
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"It is alarming to note that the very people who are responsible for IT security are not much better at protecting the information on their business phones than most of their co-workers, who don't necessarily know any better," said Andrew Kahl, of Credant Technologies, the company behind the new survey.
"If a mobile or smartphone goes missing and isn't protected with a password, and contains business names and addresses and other corporate data such as business emails,
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