
Lloyd Evans, LastPass Identity Lead, APAC, gathered a panel of top security executives together last October to talk about whether or not corporate cyber security strategies need a reboot (Watch the full session here). Here are his takeaways from that conversation.
We all know that organisations have been getting progressively more sophisticated in the way they look to authenticate staff and encourage best practices behaviour. The COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns, however, have suddenly forced organisations to implement a new way of working in rapid time. It is now worth asking whether we have landed on the right setup for a permanently hybrid workforce.
Charles Gonzalez, Head of IT Security & Risk at HammondCare, explained that, in terms of ensuring staff follow the right security processes, it was important for the executives in charge to model the right behaviour.
“I think it's super important that we practice what we preach, and I have been using password managers for well over a decade myself,” he said. “We've rolled out password management across a subset of businesses within our business, and are actually planning to roll that across the entire fleet as well.”
Gonzalez added that a crucial part of his strategy would be based around education, to try to get past the natural resistance many users have to changing the way they have been working for years. This is something that Fadi Jafari, Cyber Security and Risk Director at Deakin University, said was a particular challenge with his user base.
He has people on his network from all walks of life, ranging from veteran academics to first year university students. Cyber security needs to be put into context for all of them.
“We have different messages targeting different people based on the roles and the risk profile they present to the organisation,” he said. “But at the same time we make good tools available to everyone, and we were surprised that when we told students that they could use Password Vault, not many of them knew there was such a thing.”
“I think we are guilty in the technology space of assuming that people know things and that it is trivial, but educating people and making sure the message has come across, and just being ‘in your face’ all the time is essential to the success of these initiatives that we are all working on,” Jafari explained.