So says Soca e-crime fighter...
By Dan Ilett
Published: 25 April 2006 15:05 BST
Employees are still one of the greatest threats to corporate security as new-aged mafia gangs infiltrate companies, the UK's crime-fighting agency has said.
Speaking today at the Infosecurity conference in London, Tony Neate, e-crime liaison for the Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca), said insider 'plants' are causing significant damage to companies.
He said: "We have fraud and ID theft but one of the big threats still comes from the trusted insiders. That is people inside the company who are attacking the systems.
"[Organised crime] has changed. You still have traditional organised crime but now they have learned to compromise employees and contractors. [They are] new-aged, maybe have computer degrees and are enterprising themselves. They have a wide circle of associates and new structures."
Neate's comments are some of the first from the new agency, which so far has tended to shy away from press attention.
Soca was formed earlier this month, combining the National Crime Squad, the National Criminal Intelligence Service and experts from HM Revenue & Customs and the UK Immigration Service.
The National Hi-Tech Crime Unit, which previously dealt with internet crime in the UK, has also been rolled into Soca.
The new agency is chaired by former MI5 director general Sir Stephen Lander, and will have a budget of more than £400m and around 4,200 staff.
According to Soca's annual plan, around 40 per cent of its efforts will be directed towards combating drugs trafficking; 25 per cent towards organised immigration crime; and 10 per cent towards individual and private sector fraud, including identity fraud and electronic fraud from internet banking and ecommerce.
The cost of organised crime to the UK is estimated at around £20bn per year - more than £300 for every person in the country.
Back to ID Management Special Report
Gordon Brown sets up ID fraud taskforce
Banking chief to head up ID management panel
Police to develop national video ID system
Facial recognition will automatically identify images of wanted criminals
Ciggie giant signs up for ID management
Gallaher ramps up, from offices to tobacco fields
Password Hell: Top tips
We could probably all be more secure but can you be secure enough?
Password Hell (Part 2): Companies must get it right... now
... even if that means ditching them altogether, say industry experts
Stories from around the web...
The profits in privacy CIO.com
Avoiding an identity crisis SC Magazine
Realising the business value of identity management IT Analysis
Hidden challenges of federated identity Infoworld
Getting a good read on the biometrics market Security Sales & Integration
Make your voice heard
silicon.com and the Bathwick Group have created an opportunity for business and IT executives to share their experience with each other and thus enhance their knowledge of the IT marketplace.
Join our research panel, and you'll be asked to participate in short surveys - and then will be privy to the answers of all your colleagues, as we send you tailored versions of the results.
Extras include complementary passes to silicon.com events and survey prizes such as iPods. Plus, there are the obvious networking opportunities with your fellow panellists.
For more about the Research Panel and how to join, click here
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page