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For the research, decision makers were interviewed about the emerging shift from Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) to Bring Your Own Services (BYOS).

The results indicate that while the vast majority of organizations would like to harness the power and ease that file synchronization technology could give them, only 20 percent currently allow these services due to fears of data leakage, security breaches and compliance issues.
To protect themselves against these threats, 59 percent of organizations use a combination of policy backed up with blocking techniques to stem the tide of enterprise files spilling onto external servers and devices. A further 20 percent rely on policy alone to stop the mass leakage of proprietary and regulated data.
In stark contrast, a significant fifth of companies have no measures in place at all to prevent their staff from accessing file synchronization tools, leaving their employees free to take confidential data outside the company with them. Of this fifth, an astonishing 70 percent were seemingly not concerned about having no controls in place to defend themselves against critical information leakage or loss.
With BYOS threatening to sweep past all company defenses and carry away the company data, the reaction seems two-fold: while the majority of companies block file synch services completely, the rest leave their employees free reign.
David Gibson, VP of Strategy at Varonis said: “As workers are increasingly required to divide their time between working on the move, at home and in the office, companies and employees alike yearn for the ease of use and convenience of file synch services. Even organizations that block these services may have employees using them when they’re not connected to the corporate network, breaching the defenses of a corporation and introducing a host of new vulnerabilities. The challenge is to provide companies with a service that has the robust controls of its internal system while empowering staff to do their work wherever, whenever and from whichever device they need.”


Spotlight

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Posted on 22 May 2013. | Hidden vulnerabilities lie in everyday activities that can expose personal information and lead to data breach, including buying gas with a credit card or wearing a pacemaker.

A closer look at Mega cloud storage
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The CSO perspective on healthcare security and compliance
Posted on 20 May 2013. | Randall Gamby is the CSO of the Medicaid Information Service Center of New York. In this interview he discusses healthcare security and compliance challenges and offers a variety of tips.
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