> If you don’t think this is happening in your organization, think again
That story probably never happened anyway. But the essence of the article is very true. I never have been in a corp where IT enforces 100% conformity anyway (apart from medical industry).
Sure, there are actual successful attacks, but that is mostly not the fault of unsanctioned programs.
But there are systems where people should not just start to use any system, because information gets lost on the way. That would include CRM and ERP in my opinion. That a company can exist without a CRM is questionable to begin with and solutions are plentiful. If they did not have anything like that...
If the story were true, it would not be the fault of Chief Input/Output.
I've been in corporate IT where this happened. All company apps were built internally. None were able to run on anything past Windows XP. On top of my regular help desk, asset management, software project, and lease refresh program I was also somehow supposed to make the software work with Windows 7 as they had let the developers go. This is the same company that refused my sane security requirements and ignored just about everything until too late. I hear they have since outsourced IT and networking and it's failing dramatically, but they are saving money right?
That story probably never happened anyway. But the essence of the article is very true. I never have been in a corp where IT enforces 100% conformity anyway (apart from medical industry).
Sure, there are actual successful attacks, but that is mostly not the fault of unsanctioned programs.
But there are systems where people should not just start to use any system, because information gets lost on the way. That would include CRM and ERP in my opinion. That a company can exist without a CRM is questionable to begin with and solutions are plentiful. If they did not have anything like that...
If the story were true, it would not be the fault of Chief Input/Output.