Paul Mah, on the ITBusiness Edge blog, reported on GFI’s September survey of web filtering practices in small and medium businesses and got some interesting feedback from readers.
Web filtering is put in place primarily to improve network security, but another big reason is to stop the loss of productivity, he said. Employees however can be offended by the implied lack of trust.
One of Mah’s readers said he dutifully “practices self-censorship to enhance personal productivity.” Another, however, asked: “What makes you think your employees are productive now? A slacker will always find a way to slack around.”
GFI’s survey last year found that 47 percent of U.S. SMEs had the means to monitor or filter HTTP traffic. The GFI survey released in September (631 respondents), showed an increase in the number monitoring or filtering HTTP traffic (69.9 percent).
(GFI graphic — click to enlarge)
From the report:
“When asked why they had invested in a web filtering and web security solution, 9 in 10 SMEs said they did so to block inappropriate content, to prevent malware infections from downloaded files and to prevent malware attacks via drive-by downloads. More than half said they wanted to reduce cyber slacking, to control what sites employees can or cannot visit and to reduce bandwidth costs associated with unnecessary browsing/streaming.”
Paul Mah story here: Survey Finds SMBs are Implementing Web Filtering
GFI-Sunbelt report here.
Credit to Tom Kelchner, Sunbelt