home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Computer security chiefs have stepped up their campaign against the
- threat of computer attack after a series of computer viruses hit firms
- earlier this month. Rolls Royce, British Rail, the House of Commons have
- all been inflitrated, and a security expert has warned computer firms to
- brace themselves for further attacks. They fear a new worldwide wave of
- viruses is hitting computer systems and warn IT chiefs to step up
- security procedures. Rolls Royce says it has experienced a near epidemic
- of viruses in 1991, with four separate incidents to date, compared to
- six in the whole of the last year. The virus spread through Rolls
- Royce's PC network, and although each one was isolated and destroyed,
- security chiefs had to scan thousands of disks to eliminate one rogue
- program. "This is the main problem with computer viruses - once they are
- in your system it takes a vast amount of man hours to clean them up,"
- says Mike Roberts, Rolls Royce's computer director. Roberts believes the
- viruses were brought in on disks by employees doing course work at
- university or polytechnic. "Viruses have become a real worry, especially
- when you have a PC in every office in the company," says a Rolls Royce
- spokesman. British Rail has also had up to seven virus attacks in the
- past three months, and it is believed the House of Commons was hit
- earlier this month. Bob Wane, of Bedford company security firm ASK-GT,
- says it is hard to determine how much damage has been done by each of
- these viruses, but says the House of Commons virus "was isolated
- relatively quickly and purged from the system". Recent surveys have
- shown the virus threat is on the increase. A National Computing Centre
- probe of 500 members revealed that 34% had been hit at some time by a
- virus. London and the South-West are the worst affected, with up to 41%
- infiltrated, compared to 26% in the North. But encouragingly, 80% of
- those who were infected by viruses managed to locate the problem and
- remedial action. The threat has forced insurance giant Lloyds to include
- cover against virus attacks in its Lloyds Electronic and Computer Crime
- policy. But to ensure cover, firms must prove that they have taken
- strict security procedures. The new policy agreement also provides cover
- against forged faxes and electronic fraud. Security chiefs, however,
- have taken heart that the virus problem has been confined mainly to PC
- networks, and has not yet hit mainframe sites.
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- This articial orginally appeared in the Febuary 25-March 10 issue of Computer
- Talk. (C) Reed Publishing 1991.
-
- Typed up by Night Ranger of (I)nternational (C)rime (S)yndicate.
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-