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Campus IT officials feel safer, but fear botnets
Less than one-fifth of college campuses use multilayered password policies, reducing network security, a new survey says

 

Primary Topic Channel:  Safety & security , Computer security

 

One-fourth of colleges have had to delay IT projects due to security breaches, according to a survey.

Campus computer networks are better protected than they were five years ago, college and university IT administrators said in a newly released survey, but they warned that the viruses student computers can bring to a network still linger as a threat to expensive servers, other hardware, and software.

The Association for Information Communications Technology Professionals in Higher Education (ACUTA) surveyed computer officials in higher education at the organization's annual conference in Atlanta in April. The survey found that eight out of 10 IT officials believe their campus infrastructure is safer than it was in 2004, with 6 percent saying they feel less secure.

Still, nearly half of respondents said their campus's cyber security has been compromised in the last year alone, exposing at least some student information (though 70 percent of these incidents were characterized as minor). About 80 computer administrators completed the survey, an ACUTA spokeswoman said.

Read the full story at eCampus News