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Enterprise security industry failing to stop breaches

A new Forrester study comissioned by Centrify shows that the enterprise security industry is failing, with organisations being breached at an alarming rate. The study found that two-thirds of organisations experienced an average of five or more security breaches in the past two years, and hackers compromised more than one billion identities in 2016 alone.

“Cybersecurity breaches are causing more havoc and affecting more industries than ever before,” said Tom Kemp, CEO of Centrify. “Despite over $75 billion spent on cybersecurity in 2016, the products and services from major security companies have failed to stop breaches from occurring, and in fact, the problem is getting worse. This clearly indicates that traditional approaches are flat out not working in this age of access.”

For years now, organisations have relied on a well-defined boundary, supported by digital walls and gatekeepers, to protect their assets. But today, with the rapid introduction of new technologies, platforms, applications and practices, that border has disintegrated, resulting in significant exposure for the global enterprise. With 90 percent of all enterprises moving to the cloud, and billions of users accessing data across millions of applications, enterprises face an increasingly complex digital canvas of identities. These identities live in and out of the enterprise, creating a new dimension in security. Most accessed by one simple permission: the password.

“Organisations need to completely rethink their security approach, and in today’s world of access they must increase their Identity and Access Management (IAM) maturity to more effectively reduce the likelihood of a data breach,” said Kemp. “Centrify’s mandate is to ensure the breach stops here by providing a single platform to secure each user’s access to apps and infrastructure in today’s boundaryless hybrid enterprise.”

In fact, the study concluded that 83 per cent of organisations do not have a mature approach to Identity and Access Management (IAM) resulting in two times more breaches and $5 million more in costs. The study further concluded that 91 per cent of organisations with the most mature IAM stances gravitate toward integrated IAM platforms, rather than relying on multiple point solutions, and spend 40 per cent less on technology. The more mature IAM approach showed direct correlation to reduced security risk, improved productivity, increased privileged activity management and greatly reduced financial loss over their less mature counterparts.

In the study, Forrester concluded that a maturity hierarchy exists in the marketplace. The most mature groups employ more IAM approaches as well as use integrated IAM technology platforms to reduce security risk and may avoid millions in data breach costs over their less mature counterparts.

https://www.centrify.com/lp/forrester-stop-the-breach-IAM-maturity-model?utm_campaign=forrester%20stop%20the%20breach&utm_medium=pr&utm_source=press%20release&utm_content=&utm_term=&ls=928-006-pr

This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Centrify .

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