Kennesaw, Ga. - Heidelberg USA has issued a new white paper
focusing on security issues unique to modern printing facilities.
Entitled, "24 Ways A Printer Can Avoid Being Hacked," the
white paper views security, not as an unnecessary added cost, but
as a real competitive advantage printers overlook at their peril.
Security and privacy issues have taken on new urgency in
light of stepped-up cyber attacks, virus infestations and network
break-ins that target complex IT infrastructures and vital
information processes. Unfortunately, back-up and data protection
are not always a top priority for printers until job data loss and
significant downtime occur, due to accidental data deletion,
hardware failure, lost or stolen removable media-even natural
disaster. As a result, printers may fail to take appropriate steps
to safeguard employee or customer information, or to keep
production running smoothly in spite of threats to plant security.
The reality, however, is that no individual or company is immune.
"Until the unthinkable happens, printers typically do
not see themselves as potential targets for attack," said
Eugene O'Brien, Senior Technical Specialist, Prinect and CtP
Services, Heidelberg, USA, author of the white paper. "But as
printers provide more and more Internet-based products and services
to their customers, every company has a responsibility to evaluate
its security risks and determine the best security practices to
implement. '24 Ways A Printer Can Avoid Being Hacked' is a
practical guide to recognizing common security threats and taking
effective measures to reduce or eliminate them."
"24 Ways A Printer Can Avoid Being Hacked"
describes both common methods used by hackers to disrupt and
exploit other computer networks as well as common security lapses
that invite such attacks. It explodes mistakenly held beliefs about
the security of IT systems, and urges printers to show they take
security and privacy seriously by adopting a proactive approach
toward fending off unknown threats from outside and inside their
companies. It also recommends that printers use industry-standard,
vendor-recommended best practices to secure their plants.
Such measures include:
- Assigning a Chief Security Officer to establish policies and
procedures to help limit exposure and liability
- Conducting a Vulnerability Assessment to identify areas of
need
- Establishing an Acceptable Use Policy for managing access to
the Internet
- Removing unwanted software
- Creating a baseline security for servers, workstations and
printers
- Eliminating FTP, commonly termed "Failure to
Protect" by seasoned hackers
-and many more.
Whether a security threat is intentional or accidental,
internal or external, it has an impact on production and ultimately
costs a company money. As "24 Ways A Printer Can Avoid Being
Hacked" makes clear, the best way to survive a cyber-attack is
to be prepared for it.
To download a free copy of "24 Ways A Printer Can Avoid
Being Hacked," please
click here .