Research firm IDC shows a similar trend and estimates that two-thirds of the U.S. workforce will be considered mobile by 2006. For today's mobilized, real-time enterprise, it's time to get to work to secure all laptops, handhelds, and wireless devices.
Locking down laptops
According to the latest edition of the Symantec Internet Security Threat Report, more complex worms and viruses -- known in the security industry as "blended threats" -- are becoming the attack of choice among Internet vandals. Such threats are more sophisticated and often exploit several different flaws to increase the chance of infecting a computer system. The number of attacks that could be classified as a blended threat in the first half of 2003 was 20 percent higher than in the previous six months, according to the report.
That's especially disturbing news for employees and partners that regularly travel outside the perimeter firewall and connect to the network. Why? Because blended threats such as Nimda, Code Red, and Slammer specifically target laptops outside the firewall in order to gain unauthorized enterprise network access during an internet connection. (Laptop users can also become unwitting victims of Distributed Denial of Service, or DDoS, attacks.)
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