Even companies that do everything right when they built their security infrastructure can still be hacked.
The sad fact is, the weak point in every cybersecurity system is you and the people you work with.
Hacks and data breaches do occur because of disgruntled employees. The majority of employee-caused data breaches result from negligence or ignorance. Even if the following data breach is unintentional, the potential costs are real.
How can you further protect your office?
Training.
Organizations are beginning to invest in training their users in security best practices. Recent research from Aberdeen Group shows that 91% of companies performing security awareness and training were trying to reduce cybersecurity-related risk from user behaviors.
Wombat Security has an annual “State of the Phish Report.” The 2018 edition shows a continued climb in attacks (similar reports from others reveal the same overall trend). From the report:
The research also reveals that regular, interactive training (monthly or quarterly) is twice as effective at achieving quantifiable benefits than yearly or passive training tools (email alerts, company newsletters, or videos).
The most disturbing part of that phishing attack is that it must work because it's still going on!
Here's the Wikipedia definition:
Phishing is the attempt to obtain sensitive information such as usernames, passwords, and credit card details (and money), often for malicious reasons, by disguising as a trustworthy entity in an electronic communication. The word is a neologism created as a homophone of fishing due to the similarity of using a bait in an attempt to catch a victim. According to the 2013 Microsoft Computing Safety Index, released in February 2014, the annual worldwide impact of phishing could be as high as US$5 billion.
Phishing is typically carried out by email spoofing or instant messaging, and it often directs users to enter personal information at a fake website, the look and feel of which are identical to the legitimate one and the only difference is the URL of the website in concern. Communications purporting to be from social web sites, auction sites, banks, online payment processors or IT administrators are often used to lure victims. Phishing emails may contain links to websites that distribute malware.
Creating an ongoing training plan will continually reinforce the importance of security, but what can you do today?
The best tip is an obvious one – if an email/offer in an email sounds too good to be true it almost certainly is! Never share personal details based on an email received out of the blue.
Here are 9 basic tips to get you started:
While your people are your last line of defense against phishing, you need a solid security infrastructure in place as a first line to defend against malware and prevent data breaches.
Managed network services is a possible solution for many businesses. Part of Coordinated's services include a network assessment to determine how secure your office really is. Contact us for a free consultation and assessment.