Educating remote workers on cybersecurity

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Study shows more than 25 percent remote workers had personally experienced a cyberattack.

Cybercriminals have shifted their focus to vulnerable employees who now work from home and use personal internet connections.
Business leaders need to educate remote workers on cybersecurity and better computer safety practices or risk having their data compromised.

In a recent study by Microsoft, more than 25 percent of remote workers had personally experienced a cyberattack. This is largely because employers were forced to quickly implement a remote work strategy and still don’t have the necessary security, privacy and workplace procedures in place to secure this new environment more than a year after hard lockdowns and work-from-home orders started around the world.

While most businesses can invest in more robust data protection and security measures, ‘their remote workers who can cause a potential disaster as a result of poor, inconsistent security policies and a lack of knowledge on what to look out for and how to behave in this online and hyper-connected world. The lack of effective processes or procedures could compromise critical data and cause disruption – with serious consequences.

Although some still view remote set-ups as temporary, most employees will most likely be allowed to work remotely in future. It is therefore important for businesses to make sure employees have the technology they need to be productive and know what it is that they need to do to remain secure.

Prioritising cybersecurity
Cyber criminals have become increasingly sophisticated over the past few years and businesses must remain cognisant of evolving threats if they want to protect their information assets. They need to design security controls that are not only effective against threats of today, but also provide the ability to adapt and provide protection against the unknown threats of tomorrow.

Having the best firewall in place at the office doesn't provide protection against threats aimed at people working remotely. It is about more than just a mobile phone and laptop, it extends to reliable internet access, secure access and processes to attend virtual meetings and access data.

More importantly, implementing a user-centric cyber resilience programme that covers insider threats and ongoing user cybersecurity awareness training is crucial.

Sometimes prioritising cybersecurity can be difficult if business executives consider it an unnecessary expense. Unfortunately, they often don’t always realise the extent of the losses that will come from a security breach.

All it takes is one successful simple phishing scam to be the first step in a total breach that can end up in data loss, ransomware or other extortion attempts.

Most companies, big or small, cannot afford extended downtime from a cyberattack, especially whilst trying to determine what sensitive data was stolen and which regulatory body, customer or supplier will need to be notified of the breach.

Smaller businesses are even at bigger risk because the effects of a cyberattack could be more devastating for them, and a data breach could mean the end for most start-ups.

Educating employees
Businesses cannot afford to neglect user-based activity monitoring and cybersecurity awareness training: it could be catastrophic. Education is key to ensuring that businesses are protected from cyberattacks.

To be effective, the training must be consistent, engaging and provide real examples of what to look out for to make any difference. Engaging training and an easy-to-use platform will get staff talking about cybersecurity issues, and discussion provides greater understanding.

Business needs to hold everyone to the same standard for adopting cybersecurity protocols. Nobody should get a ‘free pass’ when it comes to cybersecurity awareness training because of their designation. Executives are ultimately responsible for the secure use of company assets and must ensure that nobody is allowed to break security protocols.

Cybersecurity practices are sometimes seen as a burden and this could entice remote workers to find workarounds because they believe it might increase productivity. Open communication and practical security controls, with increased visibility, will drive good cybersecurity practices into the DNA of an organisation’s remote workforce.

Ensuring total visibility will prevent mistakes, allow one to respond immediately to threats, and ensure patches, training and other items are properly managed.

Visibility allows one to control compliance and cybersecurity issues and will give a view on anybody who may install unverified apps on their work devices, send sensitive or confidential work documents to personal email addresses or even share passwords.

Work devices have now also become personal devices, since remote workers also often let family members use their work computer for non-work-related activities. Allowing family members to use a work device could expose the entire corporate network to significant risk and every business needs to assess their policies and measure their risk exposure when personal activity is conducted on work devices.

In certain instances, this might not be allowed at all and clearly explaining this to users is critical. However, until one has visibility, there is no way of knowing what is really happening at the end-point: it will just be a guess. Guesswork is not a recommended method to ensure data security.

While it’s nearly impossible to stay entirely secure, there are basic rules that remote workers can follow to reduce the risks in this new working environment and total visibility and monitoring give you the capacity to respond to changes before damage is done.

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