Over half of legal professionals haven’t been cybersecurity trained
A new study of 300 respondents, commissioned by NordLocker, reveals gaps in cybersecurity in the workplace around legal service providers in the US.
A staggering 51% of employees in the legal service industry haven’t had cybersecurity training arranged by their current employer, according to a new survey commissioned by NordLocker, an encrypted cloud service provider. This is alarming information as the same survey reveals 83% of legal professionals handle confidential data at work.
Oliver Noble, a cybersecurity expert at NordLocker, explains:
“Since legal services is among the top ten industries most hit by ransomware, the organizations that don’t train their employees how to identify the potential risks and about the right measures to avoid them are on the brink of falling victim to various cybercriminal activities.”
11% don’t use any cybersecurity tools
The survey reveals that 11% of employees in the legal services industry don’t use any cybersecurity tools at work. Among those who do use protection on their digital devices, antivirus is the most popular software (67%) followed by a password manager (57%), a VPN (51%), and a file encryption tool (40%).
Oliver Noble says:
“With cyber racketeers going after the overwhelming amount of sensitive client data legal service providers have access to, employers who don’t urge their employees to use the necessary cybersecurity tools, or even worse, don’t provide them, are putting their reputation at stake.
“Unsecured IoT devices, such as printers, can provide a pathway to a legal firm’s computer systems.”
30% would blame their employer for a data breach
When asked who should be responsible if they accidentally caused a data breach in their workplace, the majority of legal professionals answered with “both the employer and the employee” (41%). However, almost one in three respondents (30%) would solely blame their company if they were involved in a data breach.
Noble says:
“With the human element being one of the weakest links in a company’s cybersecurity and hackers looking for vulnerabilities to exploit, it’s easy to see why many employees believe their employer should ensure appropriate means to be able to withstand threats.”
Five easy-to-implement cybersecurity practices for legal professionals:
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- Make sure your employees use strong and unique passwords to connect to your systems. Better yet, implement multi-factor authentication.
- Secure your email by training your staff to identify signs of phishing, especially when an email contains attachments and links.
- Implement and enforce periodic data backup and restoration processes. An encrypted cloud might be the most secure solution for this.
- Adopt zero-trust network access, meaning that every access request to digital resources by a member of staff should be granted only after their identity has been appropriately verified.
- Encrypt your client files to avoid data leaks in ransomware. Even if encrypted files are stolen from corporate computers, hackers won’t be able to access their content and threaten you with exposing the data publicly.
Kindly shared by NordLocker
Main article photo courtesy of Pixabay