SlashNext released its 2023 Mobile BYOD
Security Report. In partnership with a third-party
research firm, SlashNext surveyed 300 individuals about the use of personal
devices for work-related tasks, how employers balance corporate security and
employee privacy amidst the rise of BYOD, and the resulting cybersecurity gaps.
The study found that 90% of security leaders say protecting employees' personal
devices is a top priority, but only 63% say they definitely have the tools to
do it adequately. Additionally, 43% of employees were found to have been the
target of a work-related phishing attack on their personal devices.
"With the widespread use of personal mobile
devices in the workplace, it is increasingly difficult for employers to ensure
the security of sensitive information," said Patrick Harr, CEO, SlashNext. "In
2022 we saw that the use of personal devices and personal apps were the direct
cause of many high-profile corporate breaches. This is a trend that will surely
continue, as employees often use corporate and personal devices for work,
effectively doubling the attack surface for cyber criminals. Threat actors know
there are fewer security controls on personal mobile devices, and they have
increased efforts to compromise these devices and access valuable corporate
data."
Key findings of the report include:
- 71% of employees store sensitive work passwords on their personal phone
- 95% of security leaders say that phishing attacks via private messaging
apps is an increasing concern
- 66% of employees use their personal texting apps for work85% of
employers require work-related apps to be installed on employees' personal
devices
- 89% of IT and security leaders acknowledge legal concerns about having
access to employees' private data
- 81% of employers say the solution for employee mobile data security and
privacy is to give employees a separate phone just for work, which effectively
doubles the attack surface for threat actors
- More employees are worried about being the target of a corporate phishing attack
than employer surveillance on their personal devices
- 98% of employers say that even with regular training, employees are still
susceptible to phishing and other attacks
"Employees want to protect sensitive company
information on their devices, but not at the cost of their privacy," continued
Harr. "The tricky part is striking the right balance. As employees continue to
use their personal devices for work, using private messaging and texting apps,
more breaches will be reported through the mobile channel. Given the expanded
threat surface, employers need to ensure they have the necessary tools for
securing corporate data while maintaining employee privacy on personal
devices."
With the expansion of today's threat
landscape to mobile, security awareness training is not enough to keep
employees and corporate data safe. Which means every security plan must include
BYOD mobile devices, and employers should implement a strategy that includes
robust AI phishing controls to address all variations of phishing attacks,
while preserving employees' privacy.
The full report is available at this link: https://www.slashnext.com/report-the-mobile-byod-security-report/