Page 82 - Security Today, September 2018
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Your Top Data-Exposure Risk: Employees Too many IT departments lack policies to help employees protect data
BPy Jason Cronk
eople are fallible creatures. As the saying goes, no- body’s perfect.
So it should come as no surprise that employees are a top source of data breaches. According to IBM’s latest X-Force cyber-threat report, inadvertent insid-
ers—or people who are unknowingly the root cause of security inci- dents—were responsible for more than two-thirds of the total records compromised in 2017.1
Certainly, IT departments have worked hard to combat data risks that have a human element, like phishing attacks, but there are other risks that have long gone unaddressed. One of them is the visual dis- play of sensitive data.
You have probably seen someone working in a public place—like a plane, train, coffee shop or hotel lobby—with the contents of their laptop screen on full display for others to see. Such incidents can ex- pose data and result in a data breach that you may never be able to trace back to a time, place or person.
This is why it’s important to understand visual privacy risks and the steps you can take to mitigate them.
Drawing an Audience
The visual display of sensitive information should be a concern for any IT department that gives workers network access outside the office. Case in point: Almost nine of 10 mobile workers say they’ve expe- rienced someone looking over their shoulder at their laptop in public
places, according to a Ponemon Institute study.2
This “shoulder surfing” may be nothing more than random curi-
osity or it may have malicious intent.
Visual hacking involves capturing or viewing private, sensitive or
confidential information for unauthorized use. Any passerby in pub- lic places or fellow passenger on public transit could visually hack data shown on a screen with a quick, unnoticed tap of their smart- phone. They could even remember or quickly jot down displayed in- formation, like company finances, a customer’s credit-card number or a worker’s network log-in. With high-quality CCTV cameras every- where, the visual hacker might not even be in the same room.
What You Can Do
Here are four ways that IT and information-security departments can help protect data on screens:
Architect. Designing privacy-friendly systems that minimize the use of sensitive data.
Secure. Hiding sensitive data from potential threats and avoiding unnecessary details.
Supervise. Enforcing policies and procedures for the appropriate use of data, and then demonstrating compliance with them.
Balance. Informing individuals about the collection or use of their data, and giving them some control over that data.
While all four can serve as important controls, supervision is one area where many organizations fall short. Too often, workers simply don’t have guidance for accessing sensitive data in public areas or even protecting visual privacy in the workplace.
Policies should be in place to outline if, when and how mobile workers can access sensitive data on laptops or mobile devices. Poli- cies should also provide guidance for minimizing data exposure when accessing data in public is necessary, such as by angling screens away from public spaces and maintaining a clean workspace.
Of course, data privacy shouldn’t entirely rely on worker behav-
iors because, again, to err is human. Enforcing policies is hard and demonstrating worker compliance with policies is expensive and time- consuming. This is why policies need supporting technical measures that provide added protection in instances of employee negligence.
For example, providing privacy filters and requiring their use on all laptop or mobile device screens, including personal devices used for work, supports employees when they forget to angle their screen away from prying eyes. The privacy filter attaches to a device’s screen and blacks out the angled view of onlookers to help reduce the risk of visual hacking.
You can also use location-based access controls to help prevent workers from viewing sensitive data outside the office. You can use practices like data masking to limit the display of sensitive data. There are many opportunities for technology to support policy ob- jectives.
An Expectation of Privacy
We’re in a new era of data protection. Today, amid new regulations like GDPR and fresh stories about data misuse, there are expecta- tions among customers and internal stakeholders alike that compa- nies be better stewards of data.
Strong cyber-security measures can help you meet these expec- tations, bu policies, procedures and technology that help limit the visual display of sensitive data—especially as it becomes more mo- bile—can no longer be avoided.
Jason Cronk is a privacy and trust consultant at the Enterprivacy Consulting Group.
1 IBM Security, “IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Index 2018,” 2018.
2 Ponemon Institute, “Public Spaces Interview Study,” 2017, sponsored by 3M. Study based on responses from 46 professional mobile workers.
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