Companies not reducing electronic identity Theft.Ninety-nine percent of UK companies are still not implementing all the safeguards available to them to manage and control access for the right users to their systems and reduce the risk of crimes such as electronic identity theft, a new survey shows. Just one percent of companies have in place all the pieces of the identity and access management jigsaw, according to findings from the 2006 Department of Trade and Industry's biennial Information Security Breaches Survey, conducted by a consortium led by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. The survey showed, however, that where organisations did have all identity and access management safeguards in place, none reported a single identity-related security incident. Overall, levels of identity management related incidents were consistent with 2004 when the last survey was carried out. Among large companies there was a small increase; in one in five, staff had gained unaunthorised access to data. While the incidence of fraud was low, when it did occur, it tended to have a worse impact than any other type of security breach-particularly in terms of reputation damage, adverse media coverage and cost of remediation. Several small businesses reported direct losses of 10,000-50,000 [pounds sterling] as a result of fraud. Key findings from the telephone survey of 1,000 companies include: Compliance with laws and regulations has become the key driver (90 percent) for managing and controlling systems access, taking over from reducing cost of user access management and enabling new ventures over the interact. More businesses are using strong authentication techniques such as hardware tokens or digital certificates than ever-one reason why the number of incidents has not risen more. However, single factor authentication continues to prevail with 80 percent of companies still relying on passwords alone. www.entrust.com |
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