Data masking is emerging as an important – if underused- element of ensuring data protection.
With its use expected to grow, it may be time for database and application vendors to consider a more aggressive push into the area.
Forrester analyst Noel Yuhanna believes data masking will eventually become a standard feature found in database management systems and packaged applications. Currently, the market is small – Yuhanna estimates about £15 million – but is expected to increase in the years ahead on the back of compliance regulations.
“Data privacy is one of the foundational pillars needed to ensure compliance with many emerging compliance standards like PCI, SarBox, Basel II, etc.,” said Al Smith, director of IBM’s Optim Engineering. “By de-identifying personal and sensitive data, significant risks can be mitigated and costs can be saved while providing support for compliance with privacy regulations and corporate governance standards.”
IBM made a significant play in this space when it purchased Princeton Softech in 2007. The company now offers up the technology in its Optim Data Privacy product. IBM has also made a number of recent investments around ensuring data privacy during its entire life cycle, such as integration with IBM Rational Data Architect.
“In the design phase a compliance analyst can specify privacy policies as part of the data model to the Develop/Test phase, where [the] Optim Test Data Management Solution can use the policies to de-identify sensitive data as they generate subset test data for the dev/test/offshore process,” said Jim Sinisgalli, product manager for IBM Optim.
Rival database vendors Oracle and Microsoft have made plays of their own. Oracle offers a data masking solution as an add-on, while Microsoft enables users to create a transformation function through the use of SQL Server Integration Server that can mask data as it’s moved to a test database. Microsoft’s Visual Studio Team Server Database Edition provides the ability to generate test data using its Data Generation Plans feature as well.
Still, there is plenty of room in the market for third-party companies such as DataGuise. Joe Lawless, the company’s vice president of sales and marketing, said security and compliance officers know insider threats are a significant risk in nonproduction environments, where development, testing and training occur. He contended, however, that for the most part developers and database administrators are using “patchwork solutions” at best.
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