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40 year old golf loving Vishal Dhupar is the Managing Director at Symantec
India and leads the sales and marketing operations in India and
SAARC countries barring Pakistan. Vishal is responsible for development and
execution of regions strategic plans and champions the need for information
security and availability.
Where does India stand as
far as an internet security threat emerging from here is concerned?
It's
nothing to do with India in specific or any specific country. In the new
knowledge world, everything is so flat that you cross boundaries very easily.
With the acceptance of internet for doing business we have moved towards the
knowledge economy which is distinctly different form the industrial economy
that we have had. The industrial age was about control, about rules, about
accounting. The knowledge economy is about release, sharing and information.
Information can reside anywhere and you can do business based on that. This no
more a world of hackers, this is an age of people wanting to make a fortune.
They are not there to make a brand name for themselves or headlines in the
press, they only want to make fortunes for themselves, hence the whole threat
landscape is changing from hacking to exploiting.
The
command and control can be in the US or India or in any part of the world, but
most are in the US, because the broad band penetration there is the highest.
What of home PCs' in
India?
The
owner does not spend enough knowledge or money to protect his PCs', thinking
that he is so innocuous and no one will come to him. Recently there are two or
three trends that are happening in India. The broadband penetration is
increasing, we already have about 50 million broadband users. Everybody
anticipates that just like the mobile and computers got accepted, broadband is
going to be the way of life. The home PC user has to be made aware that there
is a need to secure your system well so that you also take care of others and
yourself.
How does he secure his
system?
Always
make sure that the PC has a basic anti-virus, a basic firewall. A
firewall is like the guard standing outside your house or apartment to make
sure that at least he's able to glean out the guys who look reasonable. If he
finds someone behaving suspiciously, he'll never let that person in. It's the
first line of defense. Intrusion detection software makes sure that the traffic
or the malicious code that is walking is the right one or the wrong one. Even
if there is slippage after that, the anti-virus part can take care of the
problem.
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Vishal believes in a contemporary
style of management based on information sharing, encouraging out-of the box
and creative ideas.
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But the costs? India is a
very price sensitive market... you have open source and you have free solutions
too..
Norton
is very cost effective. The reason why 70% of the market uses Norton is because
it is able to offer both the quality and price. The pricing in India is all
localized so that the affordability is higher and we ensure that with the
increase in awareness and volumes, the right pricing is there.
What is Symantec/Norton's
reaction time to a new threat? Or a perceived threat? How soon do you
have a solution in place to a new virus or code?
The
threat part works in two folds. One is the codes which are malicious and there
are chances that you know about the pattern of the code, so already you have a definition and signature built
for that and you protect it in the active way. If anything is suspicious it is
blocked immediately There are chances that you have threats that are zero day
threats. Which means that is has been introduced and created havoc even before
you have even captured it. First you have to anticipate it then capture it and
then develop an antidote. But, if the technology can take care of it, then we'd
like to depend upon that. That's why we talk of defense in depth. All the
technologies that people now use are reactive technologies, we need to move
towards the proactive. This is from the consumer perspective.
From
the enterprise perspective, things become more complex. There are people in
enterprises who are moving in and out, there are visitors, there are people of
all kinds who are working there. How do you ensure that the information that
you have still continues to remain with you. Today, 54% of data loss is
happening from the inside.
You have these 2 GB flash
drives, takes you a minute to download data and put it in your pocket, mobile
phones have cameras, you have blue tooth available, there are all kinds of
wireless devices. How do you ensure that your environment is protected. That's
the next level that enterprises are doing, what Symantec calls Security
2.0. It's not about only securing your infrastructure or PC or the server, its
also the information that resides there as well as the interactions within that
information..
People
go and buy these mammoth applications like SAP to do an HR part and each month
you have your salaries being processed on the SAP HR model. There are people
who are involved say between 27th and 30th of the month to churn out salaries. But if some person
is playing around with salary on the 5th or the 6th, can
somebody anticipate why he is doing it and at least go and alarm the person in
charge that so and so is doing something which is against his behavior? That's
Security 2.0.
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Vishal propagates macro
management, team empowerment and keeping the team constantly abreast with
new, relevant information.
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While we are encouraging the consumers to have a
comprehensive outlook at their base assets, we are also working with the
enterprises to make them look at security holistically - where do you stand
against the threat landscape? Our whole purpose is to build confidence in the connected world.
What
about India? Do you have any statistics on India?
India
has already emerged about the top countries for phishing sites, both hosted and
exploited here. Now if 70% plus of your mail in India is junk mail, that means
your very valuable asset which is your broadband is being consumed by something
that you don't need. 70% is much higher than the world average of 59%, that has
gone up from 52 to 59%. Now spam is very interesting, what is spam to you, may
not be spam to me. Spam can have a malicious intent, it can have a good intent,
or it could have a disturbing impact.
Do you
also work with Microsoft, Linux and others that design these OS, software?
We work with all of them. Many
people think that Linux is not susceptible to attack. Anything that's popular
gets exploited. At one time people were absolutely sure that Apple does not
attract attackers, but as the popularity of Macs is going up, people have
started exploiting that. Mozilla, the open source browser has a lot of people
who are passionate about protecting it,
but was also exploited. Because IE is the most popular browser, it is
exploited the most. Symantec has a list of over 7,500 vendors across the world
where we have pointed over 40,000 vulnerabilities in operating systems, in
application systems, software, etc. Depending upon the value of your assets you
can built a number of fortresses around them, but if somebody is determined to
break in, he will figure out how to break in.
What
about working with service providers to limit or stop a threat?
We are working with quite a few
of the larger service providers on this, their own gateways, their own
broadband are all protected. But on internet you get connected from this end to
the other end also. You have children who are coming with CDs', people come in
with USB drives, people doing peer-to-peer talking, these are not going through
the service providers. It's not only about the service providers doing it, it's
also important that you take care from
your end.
What of
information leakage and frauds through social networking?
Well
that's been around for a long time now, both in the physical and the
digital world. Spam, phishing are a kind of social engineering
activities. One thing is very certain, you will prosper in the good
world and
the evil world will also prosper, at most times the evil world will
have an
edge over you, you have to be smart enough to anticipate that and be
disciplined enough not to get attacked. You may have a very
sophisticated
security system at home, but if someone leaves the door open anyone
can/will
exploit that.
Tarachand Wanvari is a
consulting correspondent for Business Gyan & www.businessgyan.com. Feedback
at tarachand@ businessgyan.com
Issue
BG75 June07
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