Titania, specialists in accurate network security and compliance assessments and risk remediation software, today launched a new independent research report that uncovers the impact of exploitable misconfigurations on network security.
The study, The impact of exploitable misconfigurations on network security, finds that network professionals feel confident with their security and compliance practices but data suggests that they also leave their organizations open to risk, which is costing a significant amount of revenue. In addition, some businesses are not minimizing their attack surface effectively. Companies are prioritizing firewall security and chronicle a fast time to respond to misconfigurations when detected in annual audits. However, switches and routers are only included in 4% of audits and these devices play a vital role in reducing an organization’s attack surface and preventing lateral movement across the network.
Respondents also indicated that financial resources allocated to mitigating network configuration, which currently stands around 3.4% of the total IT budget, and a lack of accurate automation are limiting factors in misconfiguration risk management. Specifically, the study, which surveyed 160 senior cybersecurity decision-makers across the U.S. Military, Federal Government, Oil and Gas, Telecoms, and Financial Services sectors, revealed:
“What’s clear from this research is that misconfiguration risks are impacting the bottom line. Senior network professionals are prioritizing compliance and feeling confident about network security but delivering on it at scale and continuously is a major challenge,” said Phil Lewis, CEO of Titania. “80% of network traffic is inside the perimeter and security best practices are evolving to reflect the fact that protecting the perimeter of each network segment is important, but it’s equally important to check device security within the perimeter to mitigate insider threats from software, people, and traffic” continued Lewis. “If organizations want to minimize their attack surface effectively, they need to increase the cadence of risk assessments and remediation of all network devices. This is in line with a core tenant of Zero Trust security best practice, which is to verify, rather than trust that devices are secure, every day. To really minimize their risks and adhere to increasingly stringent compliance standards, then adopting a Zero Trust mindset will help companies develop a much more robust approach to network security.”
Titania commissioned independent B2B research specialist, Coleman Parkes, to conduct the study. The firm recently surveyed 160 CIOs, CTOs, CISOs, COOs, Heads of Networks, Network Security, and Network Operations leaders.
Visit info.titania.com/network-security-impact-report to read the report.