In Depth

Security Lessons from the UK

Europeans, and Brits specifically, handle security differently than do the Yanks. Understanding why and how can help give both sides new ideas.

By Malcolm Wheatley

March 01, 2005CSO — "Two countries, separated by a common language" was the conclusion that British Prime Minister Winston Churchill reached after working with America to defeat Hitler's Germany during WWII. Brits do things one way, Americans often another wayeach for their own very good reasons.

And it's a distinction that holds true in the world of security too. "Some of the differences between the U.K. and the U.S. still strike me forcefully," notes Richard Starnes, an American information security professional who has been in England for five years, currently serving as president of the U.K. chapter of the Information Systems Security Association and as director of incident response at telecommunications company Cable and Wireless. Time and again, Starnes says, he sees Americans fall foul of the assumption that security policies and practices designed for organizations within the United States will be culturally and legally acceptable in the United Kingdom and other European countries. It is, he says, "not an assumption that's valid." The bottom line: What works well in Los Angeles may not work at all in Leeds or Liverpool.

Why not? Simply put, on any one of a number of axesculturally, regulatory, organizationally, historically and geographicallyChurchill was right. Britain and America are very different. For example, the United Kingdom has a decades-long head start on preventing terrorist attacks. Yet while U.S. businesses may have built less antiterrorism capability, security at the moment may have higher organizational standing at U.S. businesses in the receding wake of 9/11. For the CSO, the time required to understand this and other differences, and their ramifications for corporate security leadership, is time worth investing for two reasons. First, American-headquartered companies with operations in Britain have an obvious need to know. Second, even companies operating solely in the United States can learn a trick or two from best practices of their counterparts across the Atlantic. From differences in detail right through to the big strategic picture (more on that later), there's value in the English point of view. Elbow RoomOn the tactical end of the scale, take the differences stemming from the physical, human and environmental geography of the country itself. Britain's mild climate and benign geology mean that its security professionals are sometimes taken aback at their American counterparts' sanguine approach to data centers located on earthquake fault lines or in "Tornado Alley," says Jason Creasey, head of projects at the London offices of the Information Security Forum International, which counts corporate giants such as Boeing, Procter & Gamble and Citibank among its 260 members. "To British eyes, it seems strange," he says.

RESOURCE CENTER
Loading...
VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
Data Center Directions Virtual Conference

Data Center VCAttend this free, 100% online event exploring tools and techniques for making your data center deliver for today and tomorrow.

» Learn more and register here

WEBCAST
The Surest Path to Effective and Efficient Compliance

VeriSignIn this webcast, we explore why and how — with best practices, practical tips and solutions that work — to ease your compliance challenge.

» View the webcast

Featured Sponsors
Sponsored Links

IS/IT Project Mgt. Credentials From Villanova - 100% Online

Learn how the new Quad-Core AMD Opteron™ processor improves performance

Data Protection: Challenges for the Traveling User

Key strategies for C-level executives and security staff

E-LOAN Maintains Reputation as a Privacy Leader with Symantec

Data Loss Prevention: Keeping Sensitive Data Out of the Wrong Hands

Prudential Financial Protects its Brand with Symantec

Envision Identity-Based Access Control for the Datacenter

Using Likewise to Comply with PCI Data Security Standard

Solving Online Credit Fraud Using Device Reputation

Think your data is safe? Think again. It's time to Outthink the Threat. Get eBook now

IDC Defines an Identity and Access Management Submarket

IDC Defines an Identity and Access Management Submarket for Managing Privileged User Accounts and Meeting GRC Requirements

Everything Today's CISO Needs to Know About Using SSO to Succeed in the Web 2.0 Era

Configuration Assessment: Choosing the Right Solution

Revolutionizing Endpoint Security with a Single Agent

Envision Identity-Based Access Control for the Datacenter

Rolling the dice with your security? Take the Self-Assessment Test now

7 Requirements of Data Loss Prevention

Information Security: Data Drains and How to Prevent Loss

How Are Open Source Development Communities Embracing Security Best Practices?

Digital Identity Protection and Data Security Get Personal

The Case for Business Software Assurance ~ Securing Your Applications

Forrester Total Economic Impact (TEI) report: Save Millions in Fraud Losses.

Diebold: Frost & Sullivan Global Physical Security Systems Integrator of the Year

Welcome to the age of Service-Oriented Security (SOS)

Enabling Compliance with Converged Mainframe Security and Storage