No Lazy Summer for Enterprise Tech
As I walked into the lobby of the San Francisco Hilton last
Wednesday, it certainly didnt feel like the dog days of ITs summer.
The hotel was hosting the Shared Insights conference on Customer
Self Service technology and practice, where I gave an afternoon
session on security
issues for customer- and partner-facing siteswhich I summarized
in my InfraSpectrum
podcast later that week.
Among my key points: The growing requirements imposed on those who
handle personal data, and the rising expectations of customers and
partners for reliable protection, make it ever more attractive for all
but the largest sites to purchase
security from expert service providers rather than trying to do it
themselves.
Also on site at the Hilton were the LinuxWorld throngs,
who heard
IBM promise that Linux was just the beginning of the open-source transformation
of enterprise IT and who also heard creative-rights legal eagle
Lawrence Lessig congratulate them for not needing IBM to legitimize
their craziness.
Meanwhile, at the other end of the country in Baltimore, eWEEKs
indefatigable Darryl Taft appeared to be mind-melding with our Web site
to produce a steady stream of news from the IBM Share
enterprise user group eventand somewhere near the great-circle
route between us, researchers at Chicago-based Luhrq were busily
deconstructing the command-and-control
infrastructure of the Mocbot Trojan that triggered this months
unusually urgent warning from
the Department of Homeland Security.
So much for taking any kind of summer vacation.
Under the circumstances, it would be all too tempting to head for
the IT war room and occupy yourself full time with fighting
the fires of network threats and staying
abreast of technical disruptions. As difficult as it may be,
though, I hope that this columns readers will also find time to make
themselves an integral part of the enterprise strategy sessions that
are ultimately the reason for doing the IT gruntworkand not fall into
the trap of thinking that IT is an end, not a means.
Tell me whats on your war rooms radar at peter_coffee@ziffdavis.com.
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