CISOs face constant dilemmas to avoid drowning in their ‘security debt’

Navigating complex obstacles to keep rising attacks from turning into more breaches.

CISOs are face a rising ‘security debt’ to secure their organizations against an increasing volume of attacks by well-armed criminals. Despite going up against a criminal industry that enjoys advantages when it comes to speed and shared weaponry, CISOs and their teams report turning away increasing volume of attacks and preventing more of them from becoming breaches or compromises, according to a new report from cyber security provider F-Secure in conjunction with Omnisperience.

In addition to the lure of successful high-profile ransomware attacks, service and affiliate models are making threat groups more effective. The sharing of tooling and offensive knowledge makes it easier to conduct more attacks against more targets.

An overwhelming percentage of the CISOs – 96 per cent – acknowledge that they face a well-organized criminal industry motivated by financial gain. Furthermore, about seven out of 10 CISOs (72 per cent) say adversaries are moving faster than they are, and a similar number (69 per cent) say their adversaries have improved their attack capabilities in the last 12-18 months.

CISOs believe that the number of incidents, which includes a breach or unauthorised access to a system, they faced remained pretty much the same because CISOs have made the right investments. However it is the incidents that haven’t been discovered which worry us most, because of the sophisticated nature of some of these attacks, organisations may not have the technology or people to identify they are in the middle of a compromise that, for example, may result in a ransomware deployment months down the road.

The report covers numerous aspects of the complex dilemmas CISOs face on a daily basis, including:

  • Employees are the primary attack vector, according to 71 per cent of the CISOs interviewed, as attackers take advantage of social channels to launch more sophisticated targeted attacks.
  • The top three threats CISOs and their teams face are phishing, ransomware and business email compromise (BEC).
  • Securing the mobile or remote workforce, which has exploded during the pandemic, presents a number of risks, particularly where employees and devices are separated from traditional controls that could prevent their compromise.
  • A vast majority of CISOs – 71 per cent – report that their ideas about what constitutes “good security” has evolved recently.

“Too often, cyber security is seen as ‘risk mitigation’ instead as a ‘business enabler’ by C-level executives. CISOs are tasked with overcoming that perception and their ‘security debt.’ To do this they must call on every ounce of their abilities, including emotional intelligence, to persuade their peers and deny attackers,” said Royce Markose CISO at RewardStyle.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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