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Home Cybersecurity

How challenging is corporate data protection?

New York Tech Editorial Team by New York Tech Editorial Team
February 17, 2022
in Cybersecurity
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Code42 released a report, conducted by Vanson Bourne, which found that cybersecurity teams are facing unprecedented challenges when it comes to protecting sensitive corporate data from exposure, leak and theft.

protecting sensitive corporate data

Identified within the research are three compounding trends increasing the risk to organizations:

  • The continued adoption of cloud technologies and a lack of visibility into them.
  • The impact of the Great Resignation and departing employees’ theft of IP and sensitive data.
  • Ongoing misunderstanding and poor communication between stakeholders at the board, security leadership and security practitioner levels.

When employees quit their jobs, there is a 37% chance an organization will lose IP. With 96% of companies noting they experience challenges in protecting corporate data from insider risk, it’s clear insider risk must be prioritized. However, ownership of the problem remains vaguely defined. Only 21% of companies’ cybersecurity budgets have a dedicated component to mitigate insider risk, and 91% of senior cybersecurity leaders still believe that their companies’ Board requires better understanding of insider risk.

“With employee turnover and the shift to remote and collaborative work, security teams are struggling to protect IP, source code and customer information. This research highlights that the challenge is even more acute when a third of employees who quit take IP with them when they leave. On top of that, three-quarters of security teams admit that they don’t know what data is leaving when employees depart their organizations,” said Joe Payne, Code42 president and CEO.

“Companies must fundamentally shift to a modern data protection approach – insider risk management (IRM) – that aligns with today’s cloud-based, hybrid-remote work environment and can protect the data that fuels their innovation, market differentiation and growth.”

The Great Resignation is increasing data exposure, leaks and exfiltration concerns

In November 2021 alone, a record 4.5 million employees left their jobs, serving as a massive catalyst for data exposure and exfiltration. This level of turnover is causing cybersecurity concerns for 98% of business leaders, cybersecurity leaders and cybersecurity practitioners, who also report a lack of visibility over what and how much sensitive data is leaving their organization.

The study found:

  • 71% don’t know what and/or how much sensitive data departing employees take to other companies.
  • 71% are concerned about sensitive data being stored outside of corporate storage where security teams lack visibility.
  • Despite an increase in cybersecurity concerns stemming from the surge in remote work, only 43% of respondents report that improving technology for a remote/hybrid workforce is a top two priority for their company.

Culture of disconnect means ownership of insider risk remains vague

While 96% of companies experience challenges in protecting corporate data from insider risk, there is a disconnect between security leaders, practitioners, business leaders and the Board that is preventing teams from accurately measuring the insider risk problem. This impacts how insider risk is quantified and presented to senior team members, including the Board.

The study also found:

  • 57% of cybersecurity practitioners report that cybersecurity leaders don’t consult the team when making decisions about their company’s cybersecurity strategy.
  • 56% of cybersecurity leaders and practitioners agree that they feel like they don’t have a strong voice in business decisions made by the business leadership team.
  • 91% of respondents still believe that their companies’ Board requires more understanding of insider risk.

Sustained hybrid/remote work push orgs to re-evaluate security awareness training

Companies are still adapting to new ways of working, and it’s clear many organizations will be managing a hybrid workforce for the foreseeable future. Hybrid-remote work heightens security challenges, and 55% of respondents are concerned about employees becoming lax in their cybersecurity practices. That number is even higher for those in the public sector (70%). The data suggests that companies should examine the frequency, relevance and quality of their training protocol.

The study also found:

  • 96% of companies believe they need to improve the data security training they give to employees.
  • 32% of organizations say they need to completely overhaul employee security training; 63% of those in the public sector are the most likely to hold this opinion.

Pre-IPO companies are making insider risk management a priority

Intellectual property (IP) is one of the most valuable commodities of a company planning to file an initial public offering (IPO). That, combined with compliance regulations around security controls, means pre-IPO companies must take a closer look at their company’s vulnerability for insider risk events. Of all company stages, pre-IPO companies are the most likely to have an IRM program (77%).

The study found:

  • 85% of pre-IPO companies cite insider risk as a Board-level priority and 82% indicate insider risk is discussed at every Board meeting.
  • Regardless of company maturity, reputational damage as a result of insider risk events is the number one concern across all organizations.
  • Loss of IP/customer data is more likely to be a fear for 51% of companies that have had a merger, acquisition or divestiture in the last 12 months than it is for companies that have one planned in the next 12 months (32%). This may be due to the tendency of employees to depart companies post-merger and a fear of those employees taking company data with them when they do so.

The public sector and financial services industry are leading the way in IRM

The public sector (84%) and financial services industry (76%) have the highest percentage of organizations with an IRM program in place and devote the largest proportion of their cybersecurity budget (26% and 24%) to insider risk compared to the survey average of 21%.

The study also found:

  • While 98% of surveyed companies in the financial services industry report having fears regarding insider risk, all industries are concerned about the impacts of an insider risk incident.
  • Media, leisure and entertainment companies have the smallest average budget allocated to mitigating insider risk (16%).
  • 58% of companies within the public sector are planning to add new cybersecurity technologies to better monitor file movements.

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