Image from Pixabay |
His Majesty the King has been pleased to honor us with a visit. Although I myself had a meeting at the office yesterday, I didn’t see him. The traces of the royal visit were visible though: I was awaited by many security guards in the morning and in the afternoon there were almost no seats in the canteen because most chairs were still arranged in theater style. But most importantly, the theme of the visit was indeed digital security.
The
king followed more or less the same program that all dignitaries are presented
with: the printing line, the data center and the Security Operations Center
(SOC). Because, well, those are the only tangible things we can show - the rest
consists of knowledge and offices. I wasn’t there myself, but luckily some tv
shows were present so we can watch some footage of the visit.
Our
printing line is quite impressive (the enthusiastic team manager has also shown
me around once). Large rolls of blank paper are printed with all kinds of
documents. At the back of the meter-long machine, they come out of the printer
as individual letters, to then be pushed into blue envelopes at dizzying speed
in the envelope inserter. Mainly because of that speed, it is important that
the equipment monitors the smooth running of things. The letters are weighed –
not to determine how many stamps should be on them, but to check whether there
is accidentally one sheet too many or too few in an envelope somewhere. Each
letter has an optically readable code, so the letter itself knows how many
sheets of paper long it is.
The
data center is another place that you as a normal mortal cannot enter. You only
enter if you have business there. The king was on a working visit and was
therefore allowed in (at least, that is what I assume – I have not seen any
images of it). Hopefully they kept royal earplugs available, because if they
really did enter the corridors where hundreds of servers are blowing, then they
certainly came in handy. It is well outside my area of expertise, but this form
of safelty is also important. And for the rest, as I said, it is mainly a
matter of keeping out everyone who has no business being there. We have various
physical security measures for that.
On
the other hand, there are the logical security measures, which ensure that
employees can only do the things they are authorized to do, that potential
intruders are kept out and that attackers who want to make our lives miserable
are disappointed. But these measures are not visible, so why did the king visit
the SOC anyway? Well, the SOC is not a normal space. The workstations are
arranged in battle order, each with no fewer than four screens. A large video
wall draws everybody’s attention and SOC employees notice immediately if a
value goes into the red somewhere. There really is something to see at the SOC,
even if you hardly understand what you are seeing.
When
the king goes somewhere, he is surrounded by visible and invisible security
measures. We also have to deal with this in information security. The security
of the print line and the data center comprises, just like the space of the
SOC, visible components. But in addition to that, we have many more things and
especially people who ensure that not only our information security, but also
our continuity and privacy are guaranteed. There is little to see in such a
system, even for a layman of royal blood, and those many colleagues who deal
with these matters on a daily basis – well, they are also just ordinary, hardly
worth seeing people. And that is why the king did not join our team for tea.
Therefore,
here is a generous shout-out to all those colleagues who, when managing their
system or creating their application, are not only concerned with the actual
functionality, but also take into account all the security requirements that
are set (I know how difficult that can be). And also to all colleagues who
realize in their daily work that adequate security is a matter for all of us.
And, last but not least, to the colleagues in my own team, who do their best
every day to make the rest of the organization color within the lines. All that
work is invisible, no king comes to look at it. But that doesn’t make it any
less important.
And in the big bad world…
- the
press reported on the royal visit.
[DUTCH]
- the Dutch
General Audit Office delivered a harsh judgment on cloud use by the central
government. [DUTCH]
- the United Nations Security Council met to discuss spyware.
- The UK government is considering a ban on ransomware payments across the public sector.
- Chinese companies have been charged with sending user data to China.
- President Biden gave cybersecurity a last-minute boost.
- The FBI cleverly exploits a self-destruct function in certain malware.
- From
a legal perspective, you don't have to worry that your company data in the
cloud will end up in the US anyway.
[DUTCH]