The State of Incident Response 2021 surveyed 400 information security and 100 legal and compliance leaders from companies with over $500M in annual revenue, identifying a lack of clarity from information security professionals about when and how to engage legal as part of an incident response. The survey also identified challenges with digital evidence preservation, breach notification readiness, a proper communication process.
With the volume and sophistication of cyber threats growing, we asked 400 information security and 100 legal and compliance leaders from companies with over $500M in annual revenue how their organizations are planning to deal with incident response. Nearly all teams plan on automating more of their IR process, but nearly half face headwinds like lack of in-house expertise, lack of proper technology, and lack of bandwidth.
We surveyed 400 information security and 100 legal and compliance leaders from companies with over $500M in annual revenue and more than half reported increased cybersecurity budgets for next year and that their executive leadership is more aware of cyber threats. However, over 40% report internal obstacles with the adoption of security processes, lack of organization-wide support, and a "bare minimum" approach to security.
Internal security teams are overwhelmed by cyber threats and finding seasoned incident response professionals is now harder and more expensive. The State of Incident Response 2021 surveyed 400 information security and 100 legal and compliance leaders from companies with over $500M in annual revenue to learn how managed detection and response vendors are incorporated into their security programs. Over 76% of organizations are relying on a third-party vendor to augment in-house capabilities, and their biggest benefit is delivering faster containment, response, and more automation capabilities.
Chris Campbell, Chief Strategist at Kroll, Michael Kiely, President of U.S. Government Affairs at UPS and John Selib, Senior Vice President, Global Policy & Public Affairs at Pfizer, discuss the impact of regulation on the life sciences industry as well as emerging hot topics.
Lookout CCA integrates with its CASB and ZTNA capabilities to help enable a fully effective zero trust model across all of your devices, SaaS and private apps, and users.
Lookout CCA integrates with its CASB and ZTNA capabilities to help enable a fully effective zero trust model across all of your devices, SaaS and private apps, and users.
Learn about the Microsoft PowerApps data leaks that affected over 47 businesses across the globe. In our latest published research, UpGuard analysts discuss a systemic problem with the Microsoft PowerApps product that led to 38 million records becoming exposed through data leaks. The types of data included personal information used for COVID-19 contact tracing, COVID-19 vaccination appointments, social security numbers for job applicants, employee IDs, and millions of names and email addresses.
Cybersecurity is a business issue, not just a technology issue, and it is no longer deemed as a luxurious investment but rather a necessary one. It’s been a long time coming, but companies are finally coming to terms with the seriousness of cyber threats. Cyber attacks are growing in complexity, and their unpredictable nature stimulated by the evolution of technology has prompted companies to significantly boost their cybersecurity budget.