Compliance is knowing

October 2017 Information Security, Infrastructure

You cannot swing a laptop without hitting a major data breach these days. Internationally there are lawsuits launched every day. Security officers are being raked over the coals and their integrity and qualifications are being scrutinised and questioned. People are infuriated by the losses, financial and reputational (even worse) to their businesses and themselves.

John Mc Loughlin MD, J2 Software.
John Mc Loughlin MD, J2 Software.

Does anyone really think there is anything different in South Africa?

The latest string of major breaches are aimed at businesses with security budgets that are larger than the annual turnover of most South African businesses. It is nothing short of naïve to think this can’t happen or is not actually happening, to you.

I live by the mantra that there are two types of businesses – those who have been breached and those that don’t know that they have been breached. Do you know where your business fits in? We live in a South Africa driven by digital migrations and evolving data security and compliance laws and regulations, the life of the chief information officer (CIO) is complex. Where should they start?

The CIO must work with the business to work out how to provide data to internal staff for them to do their jobs while keeping it secure, preventing external leaks and stopping data theft. This individual is also the one who is responsible to ensure that the business or public entity complies with PAIA and PoPI.

Is there any way this can be achieved without real visibility? Policies will always be the starting point, but without effective visibility on real usage there is no way to know that there is compliance.

Let me give you an example: your policy states that any data stored or used on a corporate asset that contains personal information must be encrypted and should not be moved or copied outside of the organisation’s secured environment. This makes sense, right? So now think about your environment, do you know:

1. How many external storage devices were inserted into any corporate asset in the last 24 hours, 7 days, etc.?

2. How many users are accessing free cloud storage platforms like Google Drive, OneDrive, Dropbox, etc.?

3. What data was copied or moved or uploaded to any of these?

4. What about a user who has copied data onto their PC desktop and renamed a file? Can you tell what they did next?

5. Has data been copied out of the ERP, HR or other system and then placed into a Word document or Excel spreadsheet?

6. Do you still think your data is secure and you are compliant with laws and your own internal policies?

The other method to help with these issues often means a business will buy a string of solutions or tools to protect data. A bit of encryption here, a firewall analysis platform there, desktop DLP over there. We then end up having a large group of tools and nobody to check them. The silky tongued sales person showed them this amazing solution and yet it sits unmanaged, reporting to nobody or simply not deployed.

You do not need to look at new tools, you need to get visibility and a partner. Please ensure that you do not simply find a product provider; make sure the information security company is a strategic business partner. The right partner will identify holes, develop a plan to cover them and also guarantee ongoing support and guidance to continually improve your data security compliance and become an integral part of your continued business success.

When you choose the right partner you will be able to rest easy and focus on your business, knowing that your data security is in good hands. The right partner can provide you with the necessary action, remediation, monitoring, alerting and should then also provide the management and risk committee reports to ensure ongoing compliance.

For more information contact J2 Software, +27 (0)87 238 1870, [email protected], www.j2.co.za





Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page



Further reading:

What are MFA fatigue attacks, and how can they be prevented?
Information Security
Multifactor authentication is a security measure that requires users to provide a second form of verification before they can log into a corporate network. It has long been considered essential for keeping fraudsters out. However, cybercriminals have been discovering clever ways to bypass it.

Read more...
SA's cybersecurity risks to watch
Information Security
The persistent myth is that cybercrime only targets the biggest companies and economies, but cybercriminals are not bound by geography, and rapidly digitising economies lure them in large numbers.

Read more...
Cyber insurance a key component in cyber defence strategies
Information Security
[Sponsored] Cyber insurance has become a key part of South African organisations’ risk reduction strategies, driven by the need for additional financial protection and contingency plans in the event of a cyber incident.

Read more...
Deception technology crucial to unmasking data theft
Information Security Security Services & Risk Management
The ‘silent theft’ of data is an increasingly prevalent cyber threat to businesses, driving the ongoing leakage of personal information in the public domain through undetected attacks that cannot even be policed by data privacy legislation.

Read more...
Data security and privacy in global mobility
Security Services & Risk Management Information Security
Data security and privacy in today’s interconnected world is of paramount importance. In the realm of global mobility, where individuals and organisations traverse borders for various reasons, safeguarding sensitive information becomes an even more critical imperative.

Read more...
Sophos celebrates partners and cybersecurity innovation at annual conference
News & Events Information Security
[Sponsored] Sun City hosted Sophos' annual partner event this year, which took place from 12 to 14 March. Sophos’ South African cybersecurity distributors and resellers gathered for an engaging two-day conference.

Read more...
The CIPC hack has potentially serious consequences
Editor's Choice Information Security
A cyber breach at the South African Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC) has put millions of companies at risk. The organisation holds a vast database of registration details, including sensitive data like ID numbers, addresses, and contact information.

Read more...
Navigating South Africa's cybersecurity regulations
Sophos Information Security Infrastructure
[Sponsored] Data privacy and compliance are not just buzzwords; they are essential components of a robust cybersecurity strategy that cannot be ignored. Understanding and adhering to local data protection laws and regulations becomes paramount.

Read more...
AI augmentation in security software and the resistance to IT
Security Services & Risk Management Information Security
The integration of AI technology into security software has been met with resistance. In this, the first in a series of two articles, Paul Meyer explores the challenges and obstacles that must be overcome to empower AI-enabled, human-centric decision-making.

Read more...
Milestone Systems joins CVE programme
Milestone Systems News & Events Information Security
Milestone Systems has partnered with the Common Vulnerability and Exposures (CVE) Programme as a CVE Numbering Authority (CNA), to assist the programme to find, describe, and catalogue known cybersecurity issues.

Read more...