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IT security spending not darkened by economic gloom

IT security spending is expected to grow

The global financial crisis so visible this past month is beginning to take its toll on information-technology spending, though IT security spending is expected to be spared in what many think will be a dismal coming year.

The financial crisis was largely triggered by billions of dollars in bad mortgage loans made as America's housing boom went bust, spreading losses throughout global markets. With credit tight and a recession in sight, businesses are laying off employees and tightening budgets, including reducing information-technology spending. But even amid the kind of financial upheaval not seen since the Great Depression, spending on information security is expected to survive the next year largely unscathed, according to several analysts and end users forced to take stock of it all.

Even in the midst of this turmoil, spending on IT security will largely escape the cost-cutting measures anticipated for other aspects of IT. That's an opinion shared by some network managers -- at least for now.

"There's no inkling whatsoever on cutting back on security spending. In fact, it's the opposite based on what I've heard," says Adam Ferrero, executive director of network services at Temple University, where the word just came down that IT spending in general would be reduced.

Temple University, which just swapped out an older standalone Check Point firewall and IBM ISS Proventia intrusion-prevention system for a single Crossbeam unified threat management device combining both technologies, is not expected to cut back on planned security projects.

In fact, despite the gloomy financial outlook, some analysts actually think IT security spending will increase.

In its annual Global State of Information Security Survey published this month, consultancy PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) said the more than 7,000 IT security professionals from 119 countries who responded indicated that 44 percent would increase their spending on security, while 31 percent said IT security spending would remain the same, 5 percent anticipated a decrease, and 20 didn't know.

"The good news for security folks in general is we saw 44% of respondents say their security spending would increase year over year," says Mark Lobel, partner in the PWC information security advisory practice.

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More about: Check Point, CrossBeam, IBM, ISS, Philips, PricewaterhouseCoopers, PriceWaterHouseCoopers, PwC
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