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C11 Cyber Security and Digital Innovation Centre: Business focus on immediate cyber risks ‘dangerously siloed’

The growing pressure for digital transformation in the wake of COVID-19 is impacting the cyber threat landscape and creating physical and emotional challenges beyond any normal security concerns, says University of Gloucestershire Professor of Cyber Security, Cameron ‘Buck’ Rogers.

An insatiable appetite for digital transformation and cultural change is impacting the threat landscape and pushing boundaries out of the office and into people’s homes.

We are gradually getting to the point where our demand for home working, access through the Internet of Things (IoT), and Operational Technology is outstripping our ability to secure it.

The pandemic has also created virtual, physical and emotional challenges that are above and beyond the normal concerns of a security professional.

Key challenges include a greater and more determined ability to distract or disorientate busy individuals, making them more susceptible to attack, compounded with being unable to imprint or replicate organisational cyber-security at home.

This often results in people taking unnecessary risk that go undetected until it’s too late.

Although we are gradually moving back towards a more normal working environment, the genie is well and truly out of the secure bottle, and has no intention of going back in.

From a cybersecurity perspective, this is being even further stressed as consumer fraud rises.

Sophisticated criminals are increasing their efforts to target the supply chain, with access to the dark web, cheap commoditised tools, and payment methods such as crypto currency, making this an ever more attractive route of attack.

At a strategic level these threats are further complicated by an increasing political and cultural divide between international governments, public bodies, agencies and businesses, all due to the uniqueness of cyber risks.

National and international communities are now often taking a dangerously siloed approach to meet their objectives.

Governments are looking at norms in cyber space and global growth; agencies at the intelligence dividend; regulators see only resilience and consumer harm, and businesses tend to focus on immediate risks, rather than wider sector issues.

As the lines increasingly blur between these factors, the borders separating security are similarly becoming more difficult to see. 

At a tactical level there is clearly a strong link between working from home and the growth in virtual private networks and remote-working attacks.

Cyber threats are quickly gaining in number, typology, persistence and complexity, all of which makes many existing controls and business continuity measures ineffective, often making the speed of post-attack discovery a significant vulnerability.

Despite this, all is not lost and taking some basic steps can make the cyber villain’s task much harder:

Listen, talk and share

There is lots of free help available for organisation to develop strong cyber security procedures, ranging from enhanced frameworks through to technical guidance. Talk to your peer organisations – good cyber security is not a competitive advantage – and find ways to share and exchange information across your sector, industry or even location. If something goes wrong, reach out for help.

Choose a framework

There are many cybersecurity frameworks of various scope and size to choose from, from cyber essentials through to ISO and NIST. Find one that suits your needs and use it. A lot of time and effort has been put into developing these and the best ones are proven to be highly effective in providing guidance and ways to measure your cyber maturity and controls.

Own your digital footprint

Have and leave good ‘digital footprints’ – the information that exists on the internet as a result of an individual’s online activity, set security settings on apps, programs and equipment and conduct a cyber MoT at least once a year.

Back it up

What you produce and own is valuable, more than you realise until it’s gone or no longer accessible. Use the ‘3-2-1’ method – keep three copies of your data, store two copies on different storage media,  and have one located off-site.

If in doubt, delete it

The majority of cyber-attacks begin with phishing or social engineering. Never think twice about deleting a message or other online approach if it doesn’t feel right. If it’s that important, the sender will follow up again.

Stay up to date

Update all machines as patches and fixes become available. Where possible automate the process so nothing gets forgotten, and make sure you get notified every time this happens.

If security was the only thing that mattered we would never be able to connect to a network of millions of potential colleagues, partners, clients and all of the invaluable information that comes with this.

Unfortunately, this also potentially opens the door to a host of possible attackers, but we can operate in a safe place as long as sensible controls are put into place.

The point is, don’t allow yourself to be the wounded gazelle, lingering at the watering hole as the lions begin to circle. Learn how to stay alert and run with the herd.

October is ‘International cyber month’ – Do your Part #BeCyberSmart – see www.staysafeonline.org

As published in Business Innovation Magazine

To find out more about the C11 Cyber Security and Digital Innovation Centre: Tel: 01453 707511 or 07912 770053 Email: C11@glos.ac.uk