Apricorn announced the findings from a Twitter poll exploring data backup and recovery processes. More than 50 percent of respondents noted that they, or their employees, have experienced a loss of data as a result of not backing up, or a failed backup.
Despite this, more than 60 percent of respondents stated that they are not required to play a role in backing up company data. This is particularly concerning given the troves of data now moving beyond the boundaries of the corporate network, as more businesses adopt home working scenarios. Respondents recognise backups as a central IT function but are clearly not sanctioned to take personal action, whether that be through tech, policy or processes.
Jon Fielding, Managing Director, EMEA Apricorn commented – “This month is Cybersecurity Awareness Month, and the focus is on “Do Your Part. #BeCyberSmart.” Data security is not the responsibility of just one person within an organization; every employee plays a part and having individual, as well as central, backups in place is critical for maintaining a strong cyber security posture and business continuity.
“Data backup keeps information safe and enables a much faster response towards complete restoration and recovery in the event of a disaster, reducing downtime and minimising financial and reputational damage.”
Opinions on the most failsafe places to store company data
Whilst backup procedures are still not at the forefront of all business cybersecurity plans, those that are backing up state that they are using the cloud (55%) as their primary location for data backups. That said, only 36 percent of respondents believe the cloud is the most failsafe place to do so.
Twenty-eight percent suggested offsite data centres are a secure alternative and 24 percent noted removable storage devices as the most failsafe place to backup company data so it can be recovered after a breach/loss.
“The fact that businesses are making additional backups of their data is a huge positive, but the responses suggest that businesses are heavily reliant on cloud storage for primary and/or secondary backups. The 3-2-1 rule should form the basis of any backup processes: keep three total copies of your data, on two different mediums, with one copy stored off-site. Maintaining physical backups even if you use cloud storage is essential in case your cloud provider experiences downtime and/or faces a breach”, Fielding added.
Many not using a second off-site location
However, a third of respondents admitted to not backing up data to a second off-site location. Of those that do, over 30 percent are backing up to the cloud and just over 20 percent are relying on storage devices to keep secondary backups.
“Online and offline storage should go hand in hand. Removable storage devices are complementary to the cloud, enabling the retention of some element of control over the data rather than abdicating all responsibility to a cloud storage provider.
“By backing up locally on hardware encrypted storage devices, and mandating employees also do this every day ensures you have recent copies of your data and makes restoring from different backup versions as easy as possible. Businesses need to make certain that should a breach occur, they have coupled their backup plan with a disaster recovery plan also”, Fielding concluded.
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