Here in the UK, after the second world war, lots of people were
driving cars which were in pretty bad repair - brakes were poor,
lights were damaged and steering was often ropey. This lead to
accidents and injuries that could have been prevented. In 1960
the Ministry of Transport introduced a compulsory test, now
commonly called the MOT, on all vehicles over 10 years old in an
effort to ban the most dangerous cars from the road. Over time
the age of annual tests reduced to its current of 3 years and the
breadth and depth of the MOT has now expanded to incorporate new
technologies such as catalytic convertors.
Is the growth in IT related regulations and compliance
requirements following a similar trajectory to the evolution of
the MOT test?
All in all we now see far fewer “old
bangers” on the road than at any time in the
past and I wonder whether we will benefit in seeing fewer data
breaches and security lapses as computer systems are put through
regular audits or their MOT equivalent.
Of course the mistake many people make when buying a car is to
assume that a current MOT certificate is proof that a vehicle is
roadworthy. Of course it isn’t - all it means is
that at the time of testing the car was able to pass the MOT
test.
In a similar way a computer system may pass an audit but very
rapidly collapse into a state of non-compliance due to
mismanagement. Constant attention to audit and compliance is the
only sensible way to manage these needs.
Who knows, with the development of decent compliance and
regulations we may see less dangerous IT systems and fewer data
loss accidents, crashes and mishaps.
It's food for thought.
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