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SAN JOSE, Calif. Sept. 30, 2008 - -Cisco® today announced
findings from a new global security study
that spotlights numerous
risks taken by employees that can lead to one of the most prominent
security concerns for businesses: the loss of corporate information.
The study identifies common data leakage mistakes among workforces
around the world and is based on surveys of more than 2,000 employees
and information technology professionals in 10 countries. The findings
show that behavioral risks of employees can vary by country and
culture, creating opportunities for businesses to tailor risk
management plans that prevent incidents locally while remaining global
in scope.
Conducted by InsightExpress, a U.S.-based market research firm, the
study was commissioned by Cisco to examine security and data leakage (www.cisco.com/go/dlp)
implications for businesses at a time when employee lifestyles and work
environments are changing dramatically. As the reliance on centralized
offices shifts to distributed business models and remote workforces,
lines are blurring between work life and personal life. This
operational shift for businesses and the lifestyle overlap for
employees are driven in large part by the proliferation of
collaborative devices and applications that are used for both purposes,
including mobile phones, laptops, Web 2.0 applications, video and other
social media.
This evolving business environment serves as a backdrop for the
study, which surveyed 1,000 employees and 1,000 IT professionals from
various industries and company sizes in 10 countries: the United
States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, China, India,
Australia, and Brazil. The countries were chosen because they represent
a diverse set of social and business cultures, established and emerging
network-dependent economies and varied levels of Internet adoption.
"We conducted this research in order to understand behavior, not
technology per se," said John N. Stewart, chief security officer of
Cisco. "Security is ultimately rooted in users behavior, so businesses
of all sizes and employees in all professions need to understand how
behavior affects the risk and reality of data loss - and what that
ultimately means for both the individual and enterprise. Understanding
this can help strengthen relationships between IT and employees, tailor
localized awareness and education programs, and better manage risk.
Simply put, security practices can be more effective when all users
realize what their actions result in."
Of the many behavioral findings, the 10 most noteworthy were:
1. Altering security settings on computers:
One of five employees altered security settings on work devices to
bypass IT policy so they could access unauthorized Web sites. This was
most common in emerging economies like China and India. When asked why,
more than half (52 percent) said they simply wanted to access the site;
a third said, "it's no one's business" which sites they access.
2. Use of unauthorized applications:
Seven of 10 IT professionals said employee access of unauthorized
applications and Web sites (e.g. unsanctioned social media, music
download software, online shopping venues) ultimately resulted in as
many as half of their companies' data loss incidents. This belief was
most common in countries like the United States (74 percent) and India
(79 percent).
3. Unauthorized network/facility access:
In the past year, two of five IT pros dealt with employees accessing
unauthorized parts of a network or facility. This was most prevalent in
China, where almost two of three respondents encountered this issue. Of
those who reported this issue globally, two-thirds encountered multiple
incidents in the past year, and 14 percent encountered this issue
monthly.
4. Sharing sensitive corporate information:
In a sign that corporate trade secrets aren't always secret, one of
four employees (24 percent) admitted verbally sharing sensitive
information with non-employees, such as friends, family, or even
strangers. When asked why, some of the most common answers included, "I
needed to bounce an idea off someone", "I needed to vent", and "I did not see anything wrong with it."
5. Sharing corporate devices: In a
sign that data isn't always in the hands of the right people, almost
half of the employees surveyed (44 percent) share work devices with
others, such as non-employees, without supervision.
6. Blurring of work and personal devices, communications:
Almost two of three employees admitted using work computers daily for
personal use. Activities included music downloads, shopping, banking,
blogging, participating in chat groups, and more. Half of the employees
use personal email to reach customers and colleagues, but only 40
percent said this is authorized by IT.
7. Unprotected devices: At least
one in three employees leave computers logged on and unlocked when
they're away from their desk. These employees also tend to leave
laptops on their desks overnight, sometimes without logging off,
creating potential theft incidents and access to corporate and personal
data.
8. Storing logins and passwords:
One in five employees store system logins and passwords on their
computer or write them down and leave them on their desk, in unlocked
cabinets, or pasted on their computers. In some countries like China
(28 percent), employees reported storing logins and passwords to
personal financial accounts on their work devices, leaving their
identity and finances at risk. The fact that some employees leave
devices unattended magnifies this risk.
9. Losing portable storage devices:
Almost one in four (22 percent) employees carry corporate data on
portable storage devices outside of the office. This is most prevalent
in China (41 percent) and presents risks when devices are lost or
stolen.
10. Allowing "tailgating" and unsupervised roaming:
More than one in five (22 percent) German employees allow non-employees
to roam around offices unsupervised. The study average was 13 percent.
And 18 percent have allowed unknown individuals to tailgate behind
employees into corporate facilities.
"Businesses are enabling employees to become increasingly
collaborative and mobile," Stewart said. "Without modern-day security
technologies, policies, awareness and education, information is more
vulnerable. Today, data is in transit, in use, within programs, stored
on devices, and in places beyond the traditional business environment,
such as at home, on the road, in cafes, on airplanes and trains. This
trend is here to stay. To protect your data effectively, we need to
start understanding the risk characteristics of business and then base
technology, policy, and awareness and education plans on those factors."
Stewart said these behavioral findings can help companies structure
employee education programs at a regional level and sculpt global risk
management plans. He lists recommended practices for preventing data
loss, including:
- Know your data; Manage it well: Know how/where it's stored, accessed, used.
- Treat data as if it's your own - Protect it like it's your money: Educate employees how data protection equates to money earned and money lost.
- Institutionalize standards for safe conduct: Determine global policy objectives and create localized education tailored to a country's culture and threat landscape.
- Foster a culture of trust: "Employees need to feel comfortable reporting incidents so IT can resolve problems faster," Stewart said.
- Establish security awareness, education and training: Think globally, but localize and tailor programs for regions based on threat landscape and culture.
"Data protection requires teamwork across the company. It's not just an IT job anymore," he said.
Information Source: Cisco
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