Advertisment

Here’s How Employees Could Compromise Enterprise Security

The enterprise and consumer worlds are merging closer together, with enterprise security teams under increasing pressure to implement the same type of authentication methods typically seen in consumer services, such as fingerprint scanning and iris recognition.

author-image
Sidharth Shekhar
New Update
enterprise

The enterprise and consumer worlds are merging closer together, with enterprise security teams under increasing pressure to implement the same type of authentication methods typically seen in consumer services, such as fingerprint scanning and iris recognition.

Advertisment

Gemalto today released the findings of its Authentication and Identity Management Index, which revealed that 90 percent of enterprise IT professionals are concerned that employee reuse of personal credentials for work purposes could compromise security. However, with two-thirds (68 percent) saying they would be comfortable allowing employees to use their social media credentials on company resources, Gemalto's research suggests that personal applications (such as email) are the biggest worry to organizations.

Convergence of Personal and Workplace Identities

Six in ten (62 percent) believed this was the case, with a similar amount (63 percent) revealing they feel security methods designed for consumers provide sufficient protection for enterprises. In fact, over half of the respondents (52 percent) believe it will be just three years before these methods merge completely.

Advertisment

Consumer breaches impacting enterprise security

Identity theft accounts for 64 percent of all data breaches across the globe, and consumer service breaches continue to rise, resulting in almost nine in ten (89 percent) enterprises addressing their access management security policies. Half of the enterprises have implemented extra training (49 percent) to allay their security concerns, 47 percent increased security spend, and 44 percent allocated further resources.

Employee expectations around usability and mobility are affecting how enterprises approach authentication and access management.  Nearly half of respondents stated that they are increasing resources and spending on access management. Deployment rates are also increasing:  62 percent expect to implement strong authentication in two years' time – up from 51 percent of respondents who said the same thing last year, and nearly 40 percent responded they will implement Cloud SSO or IDaaS within the next two years.

Advertisment

Enterprises are clearly seeing the benefits, with over nine in ten (94 percent) using two-factor authentication to protect at least one application and nearly all respondents (96 percent) expecting to use it at some point in the future.

Mobility security still a challenge

As more enterprises become mobile, the challenges in protecting resources while increasing flexibility for employees working on the move increases. Despite an increasing amount of businesses enabling mobile working, a third (35 percent) completely restricted employees from accessing company resources via mobile devices and nine in ten (91 percent) are at least part-restricting access to resources. This is backed up as half of businesses (50 percent) admit security is one of their biggest concerns to increasing user mobility.

Advertisment

In order to protect themselves against threats from increased mobility, enterprises are still most likely to be using usernames and passwords – two-thirds of users at respondents' organizations are using this authentication method, on average. Currently, 37 percent of users at respondents' organizations are required to use two-factor authentication to access corporate resources from mobile devices, on average. However, like the rise for access while in the office, on average, respondents believe this will increase to over half (56 percent) in two years' time.

"From credential sharing to authentication practices, it's clear that consumer trends are having a big impact on enterprise security," said François Lasnier, Senior Vice President, Identity Protection at Gemalto. "But businesses need to make sure their data isn't compromised by bad personal habits. It's encouraging to see the deployment of two-factor authentication methods on the rise, and increased awareness for cloud access management, as these are the most effective solutions for businesses to secure cloud resources and protect against internal and external threats."

For IT leaders, it's important that they keep pushing for security to be a priority at the board level, and ensure that it's front of mind for everyone in an organization.

enterprise-security gemalto
Advertisment