New Market Research Challenges CXOs to Think Differently About Insider Risk
25 Août 2009 - 3:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
CXOs Rank Warding Off Intentional Insider Threats Highest in
Priority; While Accidental Breaches Rank Top for Frequency of
Incidents and Potential Business Impact BEDFORD, Mass., Aug. 25
/PRNewswire/ -- Accidental security incidents by company insiders
happen more frequently and has the potential for greater negative
impact than malicious insider attacks according to new IDC findings
announced today by research sponsor RSA, The Security Division of
EMC (NYSE: EMC). The IDC White Paper also shows a misalignment of
security concerns by a majority of CXOs who give higher priority to
protecting against malicious insider attacks over investing to
prevent more frequent and potentially more damaging accidental
insider security incidents. The just-released IDC White Paper,
"Insider Risk Management: A Framework Approach to Internal
Security," sponsored by RSA addresses insider risk - the potential
threat that an organization is exposed to by internal users who
have access to critical systems and confidential information. While
aware that users create information security risks within their
organizations, external threats often overshadow the importance of
protecting against internal risks. The new research uncovers a
misalignment of CXO security concerns with the greater number of
internal breaches and the threat posed to a business' bottom line
by accidental security breaches, inappropriate access and misuse of
information by its employee base. Among the global IT decision
makers that responded to the survey, the majority indicated they
were unclear on the sources and intentions of internal risk and
struggle to quantify the potential financial consequences and
workflow impact. Of the organizations surveyed, 52 percent
characterized their insider threat incidents as predominately
accidental, only 19 percent believed the threats were deliberate,
and the remaining 26 percent believed they were an equal
combination while 3 percent were unsure. However, when asked to
rank their top threats almost 82 percent of CXOs were unsure if
incidents from contractors and temporary staff were accidental or
deliberate. "Employers view their relationship with employees as
one of trust and recognize their people are their biggest asset,"
said Chris Christiansen, Program VP, Security Products of IDC.
"But, the vast nature of an organization's infrastructure, coupled
with a dispersed, often global employee base, and complex internal
user mix of employees, consultants, partners and outsourcers make
addressing the risks posed by its internal users the biggest
security challenge that CXO's currently face: whether the risk is
intentional or not, it's there. It's real." Other insightful
results from the white paper highlight the number of insider
security incidents from within an organization. In the previous 12
months, 400 respondents admitted to 6,244 incidents of
unintentional data loss, 5,830 Malware / Spyware attacks from
within the enterprise, and 5,794 incidents of risks created by
excessive privilege and access control rights. In total, the number
of internal security incidents from the respondents came out at
57,485 in the previous 12 months. The survey results show that
almost 40 percent of organizations plan to increase spending on
initiatives to reduce internal security risks over the next 12
months and as few as six percent will decrease spending. These
results indicate there is not a single solution to best address
internal security risks but rather a need to take a comprehensive
risk management approach to better understand the organizations'
risk profile and where to best put controls in place. "Security is
everyone's job, not just the job of the security team," said
Christopher Young, Senior Vice President of RSA Products. "Internal
risks are growing and to remain competitive, CXOs must change the
way they defend their business and expand security priorities to
address the heightened need for protection from risk both
intentional and accidental from an insider. CXO's must adopt a
holistic strategy to mitigating insider threat that focuses on
protecting critical information from misuse, leakage and loss by
internal users, whether accidental or deliberate." Although the
increased sophistication of data breaches by determined fraudsters
are prevalent, this new data highlights that unintentional data
loss and information security controls affects the operational
integrity of an organization to a greater degree than intentional,
malicious attacks. Key research findings include: -- Unintentional
vs. Deliberate Risk: Malicious insider threats, such as
unauthorized access to confidential data and the spread of malware
and spyware from within the enterprise ranked highest among CXO
security concerns. However, the insider security threats that
caused the largest number of instances (unintentional data loss
through employee negligence) and greatest financial impact
(out-of-date or excessive privileges and access control rights for
users) were accidental. -- Source of Threat: In the last year, the
greatest source of insider threat came from contractors and
temporary employees. -- Financial Loss: The average annual
financial loss from insider risk was nearly $800,000 in the IT
Outsourcing industry. -- Decision-maker Uncertainty: While 93
percent of respondents were responsible for security decisions
within their organizations, nearly 82 percent were unclear on the
source of their company's insider risk and could not accurately
pinpoint or quantify the nature of the financial impact. The IDC
White Paper sponsored by RSA, "Insider Risk Management: A Framework
Approach to Internal Security," is available on the RSA website at
http://www.rsa.com/insider-risk. About RSA RSA, The Security
Division of EMC, is the premier provider of security solutions for
business acceleration, helping the world's leading organizations
succeed by solving their most complex and sensitive security
challenges. RSA's information-centric approach to security guards
the integrity and confidentiality of information throughout its
lifecycle - no matter where it moves, who accesses it or how it is
used. RSA offers industry-leading solutions in identity assurance
& access control, data loss prevention, encryption & key
management, compliance & security information management and
fraud protection. These solutions bring trust to millions of user
identities, the transactions that they perform, and the data that
is generated. For more information, please visit
http://www.rsa.com/ and http://www.emc.com/. *IDC White Paper
sponsored by RSA, "Insider Risk Management: A Framework Approach to
Internal Security," Doc # 219105, August 2009 DATASOURCE: EMC
Corporation CONTACT: Kerry Walker of Outcast Communications,
+1-617-201-7494, , or Lona Therrien of RSA, The Security Division
of EMC, +1-781-515-5449, Web Site: http://www.emc.com/
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