RSA: Security as an afterthought hobbles business

Summary: Art Coviello, president of RSA, explains why IT security is like the brakes on a car and how it can be an enabler of business initiatives

IT security is like the brakes on a car, according to the head of RSA. It can allow business to go faster, but not if it's an afterthought.

Unlike the car industry — which builds in security features, like brakes, from the outset — business often treats security as an afterthought, which can be crippling to new initiatives, RSA boss Art Coviello told ZDNet.com.au in a video interview last week.

"Do the automobile manufacturers wait until a car crashes before they decide to put brakes in the automobile? They don't do that. They believe brakes need to be inherently part of the automobile," he said.

"In fact, brakes are not unlike security. What's the express purpose of brakes on an automobile? It's to slow you down or stop you but, in reality, are you going to go 60mph or 80mph if you didn't have brakes?" said Coviello.

In order to realise this idea of allowing business to go faster, security professionals need to stop being the people that say "no", said Coviello.

Instead, he said, they need to be the people that say "how": "How you can have confidence to take more advantage of the internet, do things with confidence and be fearless about your next business initiative," Coviello said.

"Security can be an enabler of innovation [and] an enabler of business initiatives, if you view it that way and if you build it in from the outset," he added.

Topic: Security

Munir Kotadia

About Munir Kotadia

Munir first became involved with online publishing in 1998 when he joined ZDNet UK and later moved into print publishing as Chief Reporter for IT Week, part of ZDNet UK, a weekly trade newspaper targeted at Enterprise IT managers. He later moved back into online publishing as Senior News Reporter for ZDNet UK.

Munir was recognised as Australia's Best Technology Columnist at the 5th Annual Sun Microsystems IT Journalism Awards 2007. In the previous year he was named Best News Journalist at the Consensus IT Writers Awards.

He no longer uses his Commodore 64.

Liam Tung

About Liam Tung

Liam Tung is an Australian business technology journalist living a few too many Swedish miles north of Stockholm for his liking. He gained a bachelors degree in economics and arts (cultural studies) at Sydney's Macquarie University, but hacked (without Norse or malicious code for that matter) his way into a career as an enterprise tech, security and telecommunications journalist with ZDNet Australia. These days Liam is a full time freelance technology journalist who writes for several Australian publications, including the Sydney Morning Herald online. He's interested primarily in how information technology impacts the way business and people communicate, trade, and consume.

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