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Adapting Security Strategies For A Remote Workforce

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The COVID-19 pandemic has forced organizations to pivot quickly from a fully on-prem or hybrid on-prem/remote office setting to a nearly 100 percent remote work environment. One of the most pressing challenges of this transition has been the instantaneous shift in how organizations must approach cybersecurity. To best protect data in a remote workforce, it is critical to first identify risks associated with this transformation, and then institute best practices that will strengthen security and reduce data exposure.

Understanding the threats

When employees move from a single, secure business network to home networks, they generally have less-robust security protections. While connecting to a VPN can help reduce security risks, critical data not saved to a protected work network can potentially be exploited.

IoT creates additional complexity. According to Deloitte, the average household has 11 connected devices — ranging from TVs and thermostats to security cameras and appliances. Each device represents yet another pathway into an employee’s home network and puts criminals one step closer to accessing sensitive data.

It is also important to consider that employees working remotely are more likely to use their work computers for activities such as shopping, paying bills and general web browsing, which increases the risk of exposing company data. When combined with the increased frequency of pandemic-related phishing attempts — such as fake offers for protective equipment or spoofed company emails that look like policy updates — an organization’s data becomes even more vulnerable.

Beyond the vulnerabilities of home networks, the rapid move many organizations have made to the cloud presents additional risks. McAfee found that cloud attacks jumped 630 percent between January and April — the first months of the pandemic — and many organizations were unprepared to fend off such attacks. The problem persists with many companies relying solely on basic security protections offered by cloud providers, often because their existing tools were not immediately compatible with cloud technology. Others have implemented new technology without the proper training.

Addressing the risks

Given the compounding internal and external risks that come with a remote workforce, taking the necessary actions to secure data should be a top priority. The following suggestions can greatly strengthen an organization’s security posture.

Conclusion

It is still unclear what the future holds, but a company setting that relies more heavily on remote work may likely become the status quo. By recognizing the ways in which a remote workforce changes the threat landscape, and implementing the necessary steps to address those threats, organizations will be better positioned, offensively and defensively, to secure data and maintain the business continuity necessary to remain competitive.

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