A security services vendor said this week that all data leakage incidents
could be prevented if corporate security policies are implemented, monitored and
enforced.
Orthus
published the results of its monitoring of more than 100,000 hours of user
activity captured through its Data Leakage Audit Service.
Advertisement
The broad reaching survey, undertaken over the past 12 months, looked into
the ways in which internal users access, process, store and transmit sensitive
information.
Data included personal and financial information, product roadmap and future
product details, contracts, pricing information and HR records.
The findings show that every organisation without exception had suffered
multiple instances of data leakage, many of them serious and potentially
damaging.
Orthus said that the results show clearly that the threat from within is real
and continues to be overlooked, and that trusted users are the most likely
source of information leaks.
Key results from the survey suggest that corporate data leakage is most
likely to occur through mobile devices. Around 68 per cent of all identified
events were linked to mobile rather than fixed desktop systems.
IT and customer services departments suffered the highest incidence of data
leakage, mostly during the extended working day.
The applications most favoured by users to remove sensitive data were web
mail, instant messaging and social networking sites.
Richard Hollis, managing director of Orthus, said: "Companies continue to try
and protect information by protecting the architecture. They neglect the
protection of data.
"Until organisations accept that the majority of losses are associated with
authorised users and implement the necessary controls where they are effective,
i.e. between the user and the information itself, these losses will continue."
Comments
Have your say on this article