June 10, 2008

Mac security gets a business boost

PGP is second major vendor to offer full-disk encryption of data

Businesses often thwart Macs from infiltrating their laptop ranks, and one reason given is that there's no good way of encrypting data. A lost personal Mac may bring a few tears to the hapless owner, but a corporate Mac with sensitive data falling into the wrong hands is a lawsuit in the making and potential headline-grabber.

Lack of good Mac encryption, though, is quickly becoming a bugaboo.

Yesterday, PGP Corp., a well-known vendor of enterprise data protection, said it plans to ship a full-disk encryption product for Mac OS X next month. This comes on the heels of a similar announcement: Check Point Software said in late May that it has shipped the industry's first full-disk encryption for Mac OS X.

[ Discover the pros -- and cons -- of the Mac in business in our special report. And become a Mac pro through Tom Yager's Enterprise Mac blog and InfoWorld's Enterprise Mac newsletter. ]

There's no question tech vendors that serve businesses are swooning over the Mac. "The Mac is starting to make its appearance in the enterprise to a greater extent," says Jon Oltsik, analyst at the Enterprise Strategy Group. "There's definitely demand for more enterprise-class systems management, desktop operations, and security tools."

Forrester Research figures Mac adoption in businesses tripled last year to 4.2 percent, largely due to grassroots efforts by small workgroups to bring Macs to work. As more employees demand Macs, business can no longer turn a blind eye.

Jon Allen, information security officer at Baylor University in Texas, has seen first-hand the pendulum shift a couple of times. Nearly all students and faculty worked on Macs until the mid-1990s when Windows PCs began to take over. By 2005, "we were a 95-percent PC shop," Allen says. "But now we're definitely seeing an increase in our Mac population on campus."

Today, Allen supports 580 Windows PCs and some 150 Macs. Securing Mac data through encryption hasn't been easy. Mac OS X comes with FileVault, an encryption tool for the home directory -- a tool Allen dislikes.

For starters, FileVault can have lawyers fuming. If a Mac is lost, attorneys don't have assurances that sensitive data actually resided in the home directory and thus was encrypted. And so they can't make their case when fronted with Texas law concerning loss of sensitive information. What they need is full-disk encryption to ensure everything on the Mac wasn't accessible.

[ What should you do to make the iPhone fit for the enterprise? Learn more here. ]

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