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SMEs, Information Security, and the Bottom Line

SMEs, Information Security, and the Bottom Line. Richard Henson, University of Worcester Bruce Hallas, Marmalade Box. Objectives of Session. Accept that: latest survey statistics show that information assurance is not meeting expectations

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SMEs, Information Security, and the Bottom Line

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  1. SMEs, Information Security, and the Bottom Line • Richard Henson, University of Worcester • Bruce Hallas, Marmalade Box

  2. Objectives of Session • Accept that: • latest survey statistics show that information assurance is not meeting expectations • current perceptions of information security in most SMEs across Europe is part of the problem • economic factors currently working against information risk management could be turned into drivers for good practice • businesses in some parts of the world are taking information assurance very seriously; knock-on effects for competitiveness of European businesses…

  3. Information Security and Information Assurance • Information Assurance is the practice of managing information-related risks • also known as Information Risk Management but subtle differences • relates closely to Information Security • security tends to focus more on operational management aspects • assurance looks at the management processes that drive security operations

  4. Effectiveness of Information Assurance • PriceWaterhouseCoopers survey (2008): • US, data breaches reported • Germany, • UK, data breaches reported • PriceWaterhouseCoopers (2009): • US, data breaches reported • Germany, • UK, data breaches reported

  5. Why not headline news? • Problem been brewing for some time… • Organisations certainly haven’t been doing nothing to combat risk… • problem regarded as complex • taking proper precautions expensive • wrong people often targeted to roll out a solution • Still not getting it right… • and this is large organisations and public sector with all their available resources!

  6. The SME and Data Breaches • May not even know if they’ve had a breach… • no legal obligation to disclose in many countries • so if they do find they’ve had a breach, just keep quiet? and fix it? • This has been going on for years, and SMEs have been “getting away with it” • Current situation: • no publicity about data breaches… • huge amount of publicity about the recession… • forgiven for thinking there is nothing much for them to worry about regarding information security!?!

  7. Why don’t organisations do Information Assurance Properly? • Complexity relates also to technology and organisational structure • IT manager • often expected to safeguard information systems • usually not in a senior role • IT not seen as of strategic importance • Reality: “information security is everyone’s responsibility” • Need to understand cash flow implications • needs a senior management steer

  8. Benchmarking Good Information Assurance practice • At one time, many “standards”: • Quote from Tanenbaum… wait a year… • ISO 27001 now generally accepted • Research on ISO 27001 certificates awarded: • within Europe • outside Europe • as the recession has “bitten”

  9. Research Findings • see paper… quoted per capita… • Within Europe • UK high • Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary high • elsewhere low… • Outside Europe • mostly low • Japan and Taiwan very high.. Why?

  10. ISO 27001 over time • Certificates awarded from late 2008 on… • no appreciable slow down • recession affect not significant • same trends across countries/continents • big jumps • Japan & Taiwan • Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic • little movement • France • Africa • Australasia

  11. Policy and Reality • Many survey methods use a low baseline for measuring organisational information assurance: • existence of an information security policy • Yet on its own such a document has no effect… To be following just “thespirit” of ISO27001 requires: • procedures • risk assessment • education • putting controls in place

  12. UK, West Midlands SMEs and ISO certification • Small online survey conducted by Worcester University (early 2009) • many showed little interest beyond acquiring an information security policy • itself essentially a tick box exercise… • main driver for following ISO 27001 (in spirit if not in full certification) was business partners • 7% of sample had received such a request • main drivers against certification were cost and lack of a perceived need • Backed up BSI (2008) findings - all organisations • 47% getting certified because of market pressures!!

  13. Conclusions • Continuing upward trend in times of recession an encouraging trend • Complex picture: • although most businesses are SMEs, most obtaining ISO certification are not SMEs • but many of those larger businesses obtaining ISO27001 will have SMEs in their supply chain… • will seek to influence SME partners to also get certification

  14. What has most impact on Information Security choices for SMEs? • Two areas identified and researched by UK Cybersecurity KTN special interest groups, supported by ESRC (Economic and Social Science Research Council): • Human Factors • Economics of Information Security (EIS)

  15. Human Factors • Human Factors groups identified many organisational problems • borne out in the high profile data breaches in government and large corporations • Conclusion: • Labelled as an IT problem • actually a management problem • organisations cannot improve information security with existing structure • information security part of information management • information management must be strategic and policy must apply to all employees

  16. Economics • Hard to apply to the balance sheet • a data breach might or might not happen… • in absence of hard data, rejected in risk assessment • Increased research since 2002: • many good economic “drivers” have emerged to encourage good information security

  17. Human Factors or Economics? • Human Factors groups • not much direct interest to SMEs • but will follow a change if seen as having a positive effect… • e.g. “taking” information management away from IT and making it a management issue • Economics group • of immediate interest to SMEs…

  18. SMEs and Motivation to improve Information Security • Large organisations slowly recognising that behaviour needs to change… • Small organisations more focussed on survival and making a profit… • more likely to be persuaded by economic arguments: • positive: “improve reputation; get new customers” • negative: “avoid costly data breaches, fines, etc.”

  19. Getting that Return on Investment • SME must have value for money… • EIS: basis for specifying a return on information security investment … • can give a measure of the value of data • risk assessment can predict the chance of a breach in next 5 years • can predict the cost of that breach…

  20. Getting a return on hardware • Another big issue for SMEs • attracted by the “black box” solution to security • often reject the “people” solution • will seek to blame people when black box doesn’t deliver… • EIS could support the providing of ROI data on black box security solutions • Indirectly focus SMEs on human factors…

  21. Positive Motivators for SMEs • Having an industry-standard information security management system means they are doing all they can to protect data… • “Sell” this to: • consumers worried that their data might be compromised, and increase sales • supply chain partners who take security seriously, and increase sales partnerships

  22. Negative Motivators for SMEs • The Law… • so far, not coming down hard enough on data breaches • except in Japan! Since 2005, any organisation that holds 5000 or more records subject to heavy penalties or even jail • source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/security-central/japan-tightens-personal-data-protection-356 • “may” tighten up in Europe (2012 law – late?) • Banking Industry regulations… • PCI DSS compliance for SMEs engaged in online trading • mandatory WORLDWIDE from 1st October 2009

  23. Negative Motivators for SMEs • Operational Risk • affect on ability to trade • affect on ability to even function as a business • research shows that after a downtime of just 10 days, a business will rarely recover… • Reputational Risk • with industry bodies… • customers… • with general public…

  24. Others? • Knock-on infrastructure problems • SMEs make up 95% of businesses in UK (similar figures elsewhere?) • increasingly involved in on-line trading • easy target for criminals • recent UK experience with “chip-and-pin” • Shift in PUBLIC perception • recent surveys show people more sensitive to issues involving their data than previously • Now, data loss a regular media story…

  25. Summary of Findings • World has changed… • essential that SMEs have good information security to establish the trust necessary to do business digitally • Systems of support available (e.g. ISO27001 certification) but for a small business • perceived as too expensive even in times of boom • certainly too expensive in times of slowdown • Comparison studies with some leading economies: • most as bad as UK, if not worse • some are significantly better

  26. Summary of Findings • Need to spread evidence that company data is a valuable asset • would justify spending more to protect it • Urgent need to make SMEs more aware of the risks they are taking and consequences of a data breach…

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