Intelligent Tech Channels Issue 36 | Page 40

now spread out at their homes and they ’ re competing for Internet with their kids or their spouse ’.
“ It ’ s a much different reality to the way that we have to respond to incidents today than we did a year ago and updating those plans now , if an organisation hasn ’ t already , is the most important thing .”
Creating a robust cyberdefence strategy to protect against these types of malware attacks
“ I really still believe in the best practices that you learn from all of those foundational concepts in information security like defence in depth , having strong patch management and really building an information security programme ,” said DeGrippo .
“ You can ’ t write a plan , put a book in a drawer and then never think about it again . It really should be a living document that is conducive to a security programme that you ’ re constantly revisiting , updating and continuing to strengthen all the time .”
Key priorities for CISOs and CIOs in 2021 to get on top of malware
A key priority for the year ahead is for executives to have a solid understanding of exactly what is coming in and out of their environment .
“ We talk about information security and that really is about protecting information . When information is in transit , that ’ s when the security problems begin , so
Sherrod DeGrippo , Senior Director , Threat Research and Detection , Proofpoint understanding what ’ s coming in and what ’ s coming out is crucial ,” DeGrippo said .
“ Email continues to be the number one threat vector so understanding what is coming in and understanding what is coming in to whom .
“ Who are these people that are receiving these threats ? Why are they attractive to the threat actors ? I ’ m really focused , especially as we go into the next year , on thinking not about threat modelling , but threat inventory and the threats that are actually coming in . “ It really shouldn ’ t be a theoretical practice anymore ; we really should be able
to understand from a people-centric lens each person in our organisation and what threats they ’ re actually facing each day .” That then enables the CIO to make informed decisions about who to protect , where and with what .
“ I think that there absolutely are vertical targeted threats , there are regionally targeted threats and we see those tailored to the financial institutions that are used in a specific region or specific government alerts ,” DeGrippo added .
“ I think it ’ s really important to make sure that the people that are potential targets in your organisation understand the realities of what to click on and what not to click on .”
She added that researchers had seen the threat landscape align and focus itself around business hours , business days and business processes .
“ It ’ s understanding that the more that you ’ re sitting at that desk , the more you actually are at risk . It really does go down on weekends and holidays . So having a good understanding that the threat landscape is more active on the days that people are more active at work and being conscious of that , to avoid potential social engineering threats .” •
Malware is something that ’ s always evolving – that ’ s one of the things that we can count on . It ’ s never the same day-today , week-to-week .
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