New data shows how network engineers and other members of the network team are teaming up with their counterparts in security.

Dark Reading Staff, Dark Reading

March 31, 2015

1 Min Read

Some 85% of network teams engage in security investigations today, a fourth of which spend 10- 20 hours a week on security issues.

The findings, from a study conducted by JDSU's Network Instruments, illustrates how the network engineer's job has evolved. Their security tasks include locking down networks (65%), investigating attacks (58%), and validating the configuration of security tools (50%).

The data, which comes from a survey of more than 300 network engineers, IT directors, and CIOs from around the world, shows that security tasks take up some 10 hours a week for one in four network teams. The trend has increased, too: 70% say they spend more time on security now, and one-fourth say their security work has jumped by 25%.

More than two-thirds say syslogs are their organization's main way to detect security issues, followed by SNMP, and network performance anomalies.

Read the full report here.

About the Author(s)

Dark Reading Staff

Dark Reading

Dark Reading is a leading cybersecurity media site.

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