1. What’s Our Biggest Weakness?
The goal of cybersecurity is to mitigate vulnerabilities by identifying key weaknesses. Unfortunately, these IT issues aren’t always easy to spot in the CISO role given the amount of non-tech responsibility now owned by these executives. As Security Roundtable noted, the past few years have seen the CISO role evolve from one of risk manager to business enabler, in turn forcing a shift of both perspective and process.
-
Cross-site scripting (XSS) — This attack vector remains one of the most successful and lucrative for malicious actors. Almost 28 percent of all bug bounties in 2018 were paid to white-hat hackers who discovered dom-based, reflected, stored and generic XSS vulnerabilities, according to HackerOne. What does this mean for CISOs? Even if they haven’t been a problem yet, XSS flaws almost certainly exist on the corporate network. Better to find them ahead of attackers.
-
Multi Factor authentication (MFA) — While introducing two or more factors for authentication significantly increases overall security with minimal disruption to user login processes, many organizations remain hesitant to implement this process. Employee pushback is often a primary challenge, but while CISOs don’t want to fight an uphill battle for better cybersecurity, MFA is worth the work.
-
Insider threats — The majority of organizations now consider internal threats on the same level as outsider attacks. This aligns with HackerOne findings that information disclosure remains a top-three security weakness: Despite their best efforts, employees often represent the biggest weakness in enterprise cybersecurity. Improved education plays a role in reducing this risk, but CISOs must also take steps to limit privileged access and monitor user activity across corporate networks.
2. How Many Apps Are Really Running on the Network?
Shadow IT. It’s not any CISO’s favorite phrase, but remains a common problem for enterprises. Thankfully, IT teams often have a better handle on — or can find out — exactly what applications and services are really running on corporate clouds. The number is often higher than expected: CSO pointed out that the proliferation of privately managed application programming interfaces (APIs) is quickly becoming “the new shadow IT” as developers and users deploy these APIs without security controls or oversight.
3. What’s the Cost of Improved Enterprise Cybersecurity?
Budgets matter, but so do outcomes. Here, CISOs must prepare themselves to hear the “bad news” of what it actually costs to improve cybersecurity.
4. How Do I Explain This to the Board?
The C-suite wants answers and actionable results. In turn, requests for bigger cybersecurity budgets often look like line items rather than line-of-business benefits.
Complete our form and let us e-mail the “THE URGENT NEED FOR SECURITY INSTRUMENTATION“.