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IBM Report Details New Strategy for Homeland Security and Commerce in a Networked Economy
[April 14, 2008]

IBM Report Details New Strategy for Homeland Security and Commerce in a Networked Economy


(Market Wire Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge) WASHINGTON, DC, April 14 / MARKET WIRE/ --

IBM (NYSE: IBM) today released a report
outlining new risks to people, cargo, global financial and information
flows, and modes of transport. The report highlights the complexity and
vulnerability of these systems, and provides recommendations for the
future.

Based on research and interviews with more than 200 former and current
government officials and policy experts, "Global Movement Management:
Strengthening Commerce, Security and Resiliency in Today's Networked
World," provides detailed recommendations for policymakers, companies, and
governments to enhance global economic security and resiliency. The
authors challenge public and private organizations to focus on key
similarities in their operations and to align their policies and
investments in a way that makes performance, security and resiliency a
joint effort.

"Our findings indicate that a better understanding of emerging risks makes
it possible to improve security and resilience without harming commercial
interests," according to W. Scott Gould, Vice President Public Sector
Strategy, IBM Global Business Services. "More than ever, governments and
businesses need to work together to strengthen critical economic flows --
immigration, cybersecurity, travel, transportation, cargo -- against the
risks they face in a world characterized by globalization, technology
change, and mutual interdependence."

Presenting a new approach that can guide the formation of policies, plans,
and implementation efforts, the report introduces three key ideas:

-- Intelligent Immunity - Make critical economic systems more resistant
to disruption through a strategy built on resilience that addresses
terrorism and other threats to global economic systems. Security policies
need to do more than simply prevent attacks; the best security policies
will allow organizations to isolate disruptions and recover from them
quickly.

-- Strategic Human Capital - Transform the relationships between
individuals and their organizations to enhance the individual employee's
understanding of his or her role in improving performance and reducing
risk. Empowering front-line employees through strategic investments in
training and education can be the best defense that many organizations have
against the threats they face.

-- Leverage Data and Skills Through Technology - Build technologies that
ensure that people have the right information at the right time to do their
jobs better and to keep their organizations secure. New tools and
standards for information sharing and privacy protection will be required
to help these new technologies become as cost effective and ubiquitous as
web browsers and HTML were for the development of the worldwide web.


The report addresses how risk has changed in the 21st century, noting that
today, technology and globalization allow individuals and individual events
to create disruptions and damage on a scale never before seen. As a
result, organizations are increasingly faced with the need for dramatic
changes in the level of information sharing and public and private
collaboration.

In addition, the authors call attention to the lack of sufficient
international coordination to make economic systems more secure and
resilient. Their findings suggest that a new effort is needed to energize
and provide direction for governance efforts. Such an initiative would
augment the efforts of existing security and commerce organizations around
the world, while creating a leading new forum for public and private
cooperation.

The report is available on www.ibm.com, and is
authored by IBM strategy consultants W. Scott Gould, Vice President, Public
Sector Strategy, Daniel B. Prieto, Vice President, Homeland Security and
Jonah J. Czerwinski, Managing Consultant, Homeland Security.

About the Authors

Mr. Gould is a former Chief Financial Officer and Assistant Secretary for
Administration at the U.S. Department of Commerce, Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Finance and Management at the Treasury Department and Deputy
to the Director of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service. Gould is a
fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration. He is a former
member of the National Security Agency Technical Advisory Group and the
Malcolm Baldridge National Quality Award Board of Overseers.

Mr. Prieto is a member of the Markle Foundation Task Force on National
Security in the Information Age and a visiting scholar at Stanford
University's Center for International Security and Cooperation.
Previously, he has served as Research Director of the Homeland Security
Partnership Initiative at Harvard University's Kennedy School, as a fellow
at the Council on Foreign Relations, and as a professional staff member of
the Committee on Homeland Security in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Mr. Czerwinski is a 2008 Senior Fellow at the Homeland Security Policy
Institute of The George Washington University, he serves on the Homeland
Security Advisory Council's DNDO Working Group, and is a member of the
Nuclear Defense Working Group of the Center for the Study of the Presidency
(CSP). He was director of Homeland Security Projects at CSP from
2004-2007. Czerwinski offers online analysis of homeland security issues
on www.HLSwatch.com.

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Press Contacts:
Lia P. Davis
IBM Media Relations, Government
phone 202.515.5499
email [email protected]
Sara Errickson
BRODEUR
phone 617.587.2858
email [email protected]

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