Poll: Companies still worried about open-source security
Businesses in North America and Europe remain broadly worried about the security of open-source software, according to new data from Forrester Research.
Fifty-eight percent of the large companies surveyed said they had security concerns about open source, while the figure for small and midsized businesses was slightly higher, at about two-thirds. Within those groups, only 9 percent of enterprises said they were "very concerned," compared with 45 percent for the SMBs.
More than half of SMBs (57 percent) also expressed concern that open-source software would be complex and hard to adopt, but only 32 percent of enterprises expressed a similar sentiment. In addition, 68 percent of SMBs cited the availability of service and support for open-source software as a concern, compared with 47 percent of enterprises.
The findings are among a wide range of data Forrester collected for two reports, "The State of SMB Software: 2009" and "The State of Enterprise Software: 2009."
Meanwhile, security concerns over SaaS (software as a service) seem to be diminishing among companies large and small, according to Forrester.
The research firm polled a subset of SMB respondents who indicated they weren't interested in SaaS. Twenty-seven percent named security as a factor, compared to 57 percent in a 2007 survey. A similar poll of enterprises saw 31 percent cite security concerns with SaaS, down from 47 percent in an earlier study.
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Overall, Forrester polled 2,227 IT executives and technology decision makers in the U.S., Canada, Germany, France and the UK between December 2008 and February this year.
IDG News Service
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