Have you tried turning it off and Apps Archiveson?
Two new studies confirm every computer dunce's worst fears: IT professionals (i.e. the technological bedrock of corporate America) blame the employees they're bound to help for their computer problems — at least when it comes to security.
A column for ZDNet synthesizes the findings of two new surveys about what IT professionals consider the biggest security threats. Overwhelmingly, the people tasked with protecting our corporate digital lives fear the potential for the bumbling mistakes of their charges above all else.
SEE ALSO: Sorry, but you're doing your pa$$w0rds all wrongIn the first survey, from BetterCloud, 62 percent of over 500 surveyed IT workers say that "the biggest security threat comes from well-meaning but negligent end users." That means that our weak passwords and naive clicking of shady emails keeps your IT guy up at night; we are but chimps whacking aimlessly at our machines, every keystroke a potential moment of disaster.
The second survey paints a similar picture. This one, an nCipher-commissioned survey from Ponemon Institute, picked the brains of over 5,800 IT workers. One of its top takeaways was that 54 percent of IT professionals globally "rank employee mistakes as the top threat to sensitive data." We are our own worst enemies!
Of course, the IT guys and gals have a point. Multiple surveys point to human error as a leading cause of security and data breaches. A lot of these surveys do come from companies who are conveniently selling cybersecurity tools and training. But, c'mon, we all know Karen in HR is the real problem.
I asked Mashable's beloved IT guy, Kyle Tippett, what he thought of the surveys, and he took a kinder approach. Ultimately, Tippett said, it's an organization's responsibility to invest the resources necessary to create strong security infrastructure with up-to-date tools and proactive security monitoring that can withstand user error.
"While end-user actions, and inactions, are generally the point of failure in security practices, it’s unfair to highlight fault at the user or device level," Tippett said. "The end user may open a door allowing for threats but it’s the role of IT strategists to prevent that as an option."
Guys, they really are here for us! But even if your IT team is on the ball, do your friendly neighborhood IT guy a favor and make a strong password, and stop clicking on emails from Nigerian princes.
Oh, and, when times get tough for the IT team, you can always give them a hug. They love that.
Topics Cybersecurity
Stan Lee turns 95, 'Avengers' send birthday messagesRNC tried, and failed, to insult Obama in its website codeApple fought a company called "Steve Jobs Inc."French group files criminal complaint against AppleJohn Mayer (and the internet) accepts the #KyloRenChallenge10 video games we're looking forward to in 2018Poor, unfortunate soul gets his penis stuck in a London subway gateHere's when all your favorite shows are coming back in 2018Jay Z and Bey tease 'Family Feud' video, hoping their love makes you buy TIDALIf you want people to attend your hockey game, hold wiener dog races on the iceCarrie Fisher died 1 year ago: Fans remember on TwitterLeak might have revealed 2018 flagship Android phone release timelineThe iPhone is once again the bestPoor, unfortunate soul gets his penis stuck in a London subway gate10 TV shows we're looking forward to in 2018Billie Lourd remembers Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds with touching Instagram postsBono thinks music got 'very girly' and it's been great knowing you dudeWill Apple win the lawsuits over iPhone performance? We asked lawyersUber is selling its autoJapan reportedly using facial recognition at 2020 Summer Olympics Michelle Obama's final late night show as First Lady featured plenty of 'thank yous' Prince William opens up about losing his mother almost 20 years ago 'American Crime Story: Katrina' won't air until 2018 These robots are transforming how we see wildlife Call of Duty: Warzone 2.0 CPU and GPU Benchmark Mysterious light pillars light up Canada's night sky Ariana Grande, John Legend will sing iconic 'Beauty and the Beast' duet for movie Tillerson is dead wrong in what he told the Senate on climate science Tyrion Lannister fans, assemble! Peter Dinklage in talks for next Avengers movie. Critics be damned, Apple's AirPods are dominating wireless headphone sales It took two years but 'The Sims 4' finally gets toddlers Facebook is hiring engineers to basically mind read Billie Lourd posts an emotional tribute on Instagram to mother Carrie Fisher Lily Camera company, which nabbed pre Andy Cohen's got the 411 on those 'Real Housewives Reunion' leaks Google's biggest Android problem is also ruining emoji Weird Al to release his entire catalogue in an accordion box set Vagina necklaces you didn't know you needed and now can't have Duke's disgraced Grayson Allen is the college basketball villain we need and deserve Legend after legend dropped in at the NYC comedy club last night
1.5511s , 8209.65625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Apps Archives】,Unobstructed Information Network