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IT managers are overconfident in their ability to prevent data breach threats from zombie accounts


July 03 2009

IT managers are overconfident in their ability to prevent data breach threats from zombie accounts

 

A global survey of 236 business managers from large enterprises – more than half from companies with at least 10,000 employees - reveals that 53% of IT managers are largely unaware of employee access rights to systems. This causes a proliferation of zombie accounts – accounts that remain active after employees have left the company. However, these same administrators say they have a high level of confidence that zombie accounts cannot trigger a malicious attack or perpetrate a data leak, despite high-profile evidence to the contrary.


The Courion® Corporation survey results reveal that while a vast majority (93%) of organisations are confident that terminated employees pose no security risk to their systems by virtue of legacy access, many have limited or no knowledge of the systems to which their active and terminated employees have access. This unwarranted confidence in system security leaves companies vulnerable to attacks that could cost millions.

Other key survey results include:

These figures suggest that IT administrators may be overconfident in their ability to prevent data breach threats from zombie accounts, which can cost organisations millions of pounds in damages and tarnish brand reputation. Courion recommends careful inspection of Access Assurance policies to ensure that the right users have the right access to the right resources and are doing the right things.

“The fact that 53% of IT managers are largely unaware of employee access rights to systems is of great concern and is a problem that has been exacerbated by the high frequency of mergers and acquisitions in the current climate,” warns Courion’s General Manager, Stuart Hodkinson. “The time for over confidence has passed. It is important for IT Managers to close these exploitable holes by undertaking regular audits of their systems, ensuring that employees have access to only the information they need to do their jobs.”


 

Reproduced from an article published by Security Park
© Security Park

The original article can be viewed here:
http://www.securitypark.co.uk/security_article263310.html

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