Federal Archives - IT Security Guru https://www.itsecurityguru.org/tag/federal/ The Site for our Community Wed, 10 Nov 2021 12:00:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.itsecurityguru.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/cropped-Guru_Transparent-PNG-1-32x32.png Federal Archives - IT Security Guru https://www.itsecurityguru.org/tag/federal/ 32 32 Security pros want federal government to improve private sector security posture https://www.itsecurityguru.org/2021/11/10/security-pros-want-federal-government-to-improve-private-sector-security-posture/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=security-pros-want-federal-government-to-improve-private-sector-security-posture Wed, 10 Nov 2021 11:58:08 +0000 https://www.itsecurityguru.org/?p=43016 New research by Tripwire has revealed security professionals working in the federal sector want the government to play a bigger role in securing non-governmental companies. The research report evaluated actions taken by the federal government to improve cybersecurity in 2021 and was conducted for Tripwire by Dimensional Research. It evaluated the opinions of 306 security […]

The post Security pros want federal government to improve private sector security posture appeared first on IT Security Guru.

]]>
New research by Tripwire has revealed security professionals working in the federal sector want the government to play a bigger role in securing non-governmental companies.

The research report evaluated actions taken by the federal government to improve cybersecurity in 2021 and was conducted for Tripwire by Dimensional Research. It evaluated the opinions of 306 security professionals, including 103 currently working for a United States federal government agency, with direct responsibility for the security within their organisation.

According to the research, security professionals responsible for critical infrastructure believe that National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) standards should not only be improved and strengthened but enforced outside the federal government. This is likely because only 49% of non-governmental organisations surveyed (critical infrastructure and others) have fully adopted NIST standards, yet still identify ransomware as a primary security concern.

Federal security professionals are aligned with this thinking and also believe the government should be doing more to protect its own data and systems (99%). In fact, 24% think they are falling behind when it comes to preparedness to face new threats and breaches, citing lack of both leadership prioritisation and internal expertise and resources as primary reasons.

“It’s clear that organisations – both public and private sector – are seeking further guidance from the federal government,” said Tim Erlin, vice president of strategy at Tripwire. “Generally, long-term enforcement and implementation of cybersecurity policy will take time, but it’s important that agencies lay out a plan and measure execution against that plan to protect our critical infrastructure and beyond.”

When it comes to implementing Zero Trust Architecture, both federal and non-governmental organisations agree this strategy could materially improve cybersecurity outcomes, but only 22% say improvement is highly likely. They also agreed that integrity monitoring is foundational to a successful Zero Trust strategy (50%), or at least somewhat important (43%), but only 22% considered measuring integrity and security posture to be a core tenet of Zero Trust Architecture. Secure communication (44%), limiting individual access (39%), and identifying data sources and computing services as resources (36%) were most commonly identified.

Additionally, the survey examined where organisations track on the path to Zero Trust:

  • 25% of those surveyed from the federal government described their Zero Trust implementation as mature, while only 2% of critical infrastructure organisations identified this way
  • The majority of security pros – both public and private sector – described their progress toward Zero Trust adoption as needing some work, or in progress
  • Security professionals look to federal government guidelines as the top source for obtaining Zero Trust strategies and best practices, followed by information from security solutions vendors, consultants, and analysts.

“It’s promising to see progress toward Zero Trust implementation, but lack of focus on integrity is where we fall short,” said Erlin. “Maintaining and understanding the integrity of an organisation’s people, processes and technology is the foundation of strong Zero Trust architecture and should be prioritised as such. Simply put, you can’t have Zero Trust without integrity.”

While hardening systems against ransomware may be a driving force for implementation now, 83% of security pros expect that something worse than ransomware may be coming. Fortunately, both federal and non-governmental organisations have responded to this year’s attacks on critical infrastructure with preventative action – 98% of agencies report progress on executive orders on cybersecurity (half say significant progress), and over 50% of non-government groups have taken specific steps to improve cybersecurity efforts.

The post Security pros want federal government to improve private sector security posture appeared first on IT Security Guru.

]]>
US federal payment cards to be secured with chip and PIN https://www.itsecurityguru.org/2014/10/20/us-federal-payment-cards-secured-chip-pin/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=us-federal-payment-cards-secured-chip-pin Mon, 20 Oct 2014 10:36:51 +0000 http://1080698240.test.prositehosting.co.uk/?p=7611 The USA is to adopt the Chip and PIN model after President Barack Obama signed an executive order to add security measures for federal credit cards.   The order will see microchips and PIN numbers added to Government credit cards and debit cards starting in January, with Obama also announcing that several major companies will take […]

The post US federal payment cards to be secured with chip and PIN appeared first on IT Security Guru.

]]>
The USA is to adopt the Chip and PIN model after President Barack Obama signed an executive order to add security measures for federal credit cards.
 
The order will see microchips and PIN numbers added to Government credit cards and debit cards starting in January, with Obama also announcing that several major companies will take steps to make their own systems more secure and offer more customer protections.
 
He said: “The idea that somebody halfway around the world could run up thousands of dollars in charges in your name just because they stole your number, or because you swiped your card at the wrong place in the wrong time, that’s infuriating,” reported Reuters.
 
Both the American Bankers Association and the National Retail Federation each said they supported the measures.
 
Speaking to IT Security Guru, payment security consultant Neira Jones said that the decision was interesting as it is an “opportunity to do things that they have not done before but always been inclined to and it is a good thing”.
 
She said that Obama and the White House have been keen to do this for some time, and that the balance will be tricky. “I read that half of the US will accept chip cards by the end of 2015, so there is a long way to go and to accelerate it,” she said.
 
“Organisations will firstly look at what is in it for me, and it is very difficult to look at the return on investment of security generally. It is easier to look at fraud prevention and monitoring solutions as we have metrics of fraud, and it has always been my take that whether organisations deal with cyber crime or fraud, if you deploy cyber security you have a liability shift.”
 
Mark Bower, VP of product management and solutions architecture for Voltage Security, also welcomed the move for comprehensive data security across vulnerable systems.
 
“However, data security for transactions and payments cannot stop with EMV or traditional data-at-rest encryption which only solves a fraction of the problem of data theft,” he said.
 
“Without additional data-centric security, EMV still leaves card numbers vulnerable to theft and cross-channel fraud against e-commerce systems, which is exactly what happened in the UK after chip and PIN was introduced – e-commerce fraud soared.”
 
Neira said that there will “undeniably” be a reduction in card crime as a result of this order, but fraudsters are indiscriminate with geographies and industries and if you squeeze fraud in one place, it bulges in another.

The post US federal payment cards to be secured with chip and PIN appeared first on IT Security Guru.

]]>