Social networking costs UK businesses billions
By Asavin Wattanajantra,
UK businesses are losing around £6.5 billion a year through lost productivity, as a result of the popularity of social networking sites and their use in the workplace.
According to research carried out by IT security firm Global Secure Systems (GSS) and security conference Infosecurity 2008 776 office workers surveyed admitted spending 30 minutes a day visiting social networking sites including Bebo, Facebook and MySpace at work.
Infosecurity also revealed data from a meeting of 20 senior information security professionals that highlighted the impact of social networking sites on business as one of the biggest concerns for the coming year. The group estimated that between 15 -20 per cent of bandwidth used at work was taken up with social networking sites and that for many a complete ban was the only answer.
"It would appear that most [security professionals] and IT directors loathe social networking sites and if they had it their way would ban them completely," said Infosecurity director Claire Sellick.
"But what is also coming across loud and clear is that the HR departments actually welcome the use of these sites - so there is a lot of internal pushing and shoving going on between HR and IT over how best to manage these sites."
GSS argued that organisations need to implement a properly enforced and maintained 'reasonable use' policy, and for individuals to use common sense when using social networks.
"What is apparent are the serious security implications associated with social networking, where hackers, exploiters and extortionists are worming their way into these sites extracting all sorts of information on the members," said GSS' managing director, David Hobson.
"Our advice as always to anybody using these sites is to give as little personal information as possible."
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Networking Analysis & Insight
Bring you own device: the $600 question
Inside the enterprise: A recent Cisco report claims bring your own device is gaining support from IT departments. But how much are staff willing to invest in personal technology?
- Interop 2012: Q&A, Saar Gillai, CTO, HP Networking
- Is BT the key to broadband Britain?
- Tencent: the biggest web company you’ve never heard of
- The truth about spam
- Have ISPs finally lost the DEA fight?
- Are you ready to launch IPv6 securely?
- Broadband, pricing and small businesses
- Welcome to the stay-at-home Olympics
- Q&A: Cisco on servers, storage and strategy
Latest Networking Reviews
HP t410 All-in-One Thin Client review: First look
- Swyx SwyxExpress X20 review
- Ipswitch WhatsUp Gold Premium 15
- ForeScout Technologies CounterACT 6.3.4
- ThinPrint Printer Dashboard review: First Look
- TITUS Aware for Microsoft Outlook review
- Windows Phone 7 Mango review: First Look
- Dartware InterMapper review
- Kemp Technologies LoadMaster 3600 review
- Sangfor WANACC M5500 review
advertisement
Most popular
- IBM bans use of Siri on iPhones
- Apple iPad 3 vs iPad 2 head-to-head review
- Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Ultrabook review : First look
- Chromebooks: What's gone wrong?
- HP plans massive job cuts
- Google: Government controls are the internet's biggest threat
- Macs and Android under malware threat
- Sony Vaio T13 Ultrabook review: First look
- RIM loses its head of sales
- ARM-based Windows 8 tablets facing delays
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.





