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Corporations riddled with security holes


June 23 2008

Corporations riddled with security holes

 

Poor corporate IT security is leaving businesses vulnerable - with almost 90 per cent of breaches found to have been preventable.


A trio of studies have painted a damning picture of business security, with online vulnerabilities rising as companies and authorities fail to apply patches, update antivirus software and leave firewalls disabled.

Vulnerabilities on UK company and public sector networks grew from 19 last year to 21 this year according to security analyst NTA Monitor and 87 per cent of data breaches could have been avoided by regular patching and other precautions according to a Verizon Business report into 500 forensic investigations.

Further Plc failings were highlighted by IT security firm Sophos that found that 81 per cent of 580 corporate PCs tested worldwide were missing patches and software updates and had disabled firewalls.

Finance, government, legal, retail and utilities sectors have all seen an increase in the number of overall vulnerabilities according to NTA, with government being the only sector to suffer from all of the top 10 high risk flaws.

Of this year's top 10 vulnerabilities, seven were found in last year's report and all are associated with services being made available to internet users.

Breaches originating outside the company were also the main threat identified by Verizon, responsible for 73 per cent of breaches, with 39 per cent due to a business partner.

Roy Hills, technical director at NTA said in a statement: "A hacker could also gain entry to the corporate network and change users' passwords or delete files, which could wreak corporate havoc.

"These high risk vulnerabilities are widely known and actively exploited by hackers, leaving many companies susceptible to attack."

Below are the top 10 high risk flaws in UK corporate and government networks, according to NTA Monitor:


 

Reproduced from an article published by silicon.com
© silicon.com

The original article can be viewed here:
http://software.silicon.com/security/0,39024655,39248832,00.htm

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