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What To Do When Your Company Network Is Hacked
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| Guest post by: Dovell Bonnett |
Article Overview: I have written many articles and blogs warning about the cost to a company from a security breach. Ben Worthen, a staff reporter in The Wall Street Journal’s San Francisco bureau, wrote a great article “What to Do if You’ve Been Hacked” on September 26, 2011, where he has highlighted some key things to do. All the points are excellent but the #1 “to do” is to not ignore the attack and hope it goes away. It won’t!
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Free Download - Zappos Data Breach - Customer Safety and Security By Dovell Bonnett |
What To Do When Your Company Network Is Hacked
I have written many articles and blogs warning about the cost
to a company from a security breach.
Ben Worthen, a staff reporter in The Wall Street Journal’s
San Francisco bureau, wrote a great article “What to
Do if You’ve Been Hacked” on September 26, 2011, where he has
highlighted some key things to do. All the points are excellent but the#1“to do” is
to not ignore the attack and hope it goes away. It won’t!
Here is some advice if your company network has been hacked:
1. Don’t unplug the affected computer because it can erase key
evidence stored in computer memory and not on a hard drive, but do disconnect
the it from the network.
2. Call in post-breach forensic security experts for the
investigation as soon as you discover the attack. If your IT people, police,
etc. are not properly trained key evidence can be destroyed.
3. Maintain a chain of custody to show you are following
appropriate procedures in dealing with the breach. This can help with both
legal issues and privacy protection compliance issues.
4. Determine if the breach has infected other computers and
other servers. Again the pros will have to do this.
5. Remove the infection by cleaning all data, updating all
anti-malware programs and maybe even scrubbing the computer’s hard drive and
re-installing the OS and apps from scratch.
6. Determine how many data files were affected. The last thing a
company wants to do is report a breach that then has to be modified up or down.
7. Determine who to tell and how can be as devastating to a
company as trying to figure out how the breach occurred in the first place.
With forty-six different state laws, numerous federal laws, and figuring out
which ones apply also requires specialists.
8. Finally, apologize to your customers. Make them feel that
they are important and your respect their privacy. Otherwise you risk lost
customers, wasted money to acquire customer in the first place and law suits.
With just these eight points you should start to understand
why the average cost to a company from a data breach is now at $7.2 million per
incident. While there is no way to guarantee that a company will not experience
an attack, just a few simple tasks will help:
Know the four points of vulnerability; Building, employee,
computer and network.
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Bring in a security analysis team to evaluate
all these points of vulnerabilities
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Develop a plan ahead of time on how to respond
to a breach. Companies practice fire drills why not data breach drills.
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Train your employees about security and
what to watch out for. Hey it’s their jobs too on the line.
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Buying breach insurance is important, but
to qualify the company has to have first put in place security and had
completed a security analysis.
With so many ways customers personal information can be
compromised, the best a company can do is to place enough barriers to makes
thieves look for easier prey.
Article Tags: AccessSmart, Dovell Bonnett, identity theft, internet security, password management, smart cards
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About the Author: Dovell Bonnett RSS for Dovell's articles - Visit Dovell's website Founded in 2005 and headquartered in Ladera Ranch, California, Access Smart delivers Access-as-a-Service (AaaS) solutions by way of a password manager for Windows authentication to reduce the risk of cyber-attacks. Access Smart implements AaaS using contact or contactless smartcards, magnetic stripe or 125kHz Prox technologies. The value that Access Smart brings is to offer more security functions and affordability onto a single employee ID badge. Security does not have to be cumbersome to be affective. That is why our products are designed using state-of-the-art security technologies while focusing on ease-of-use and low cost-of -ownership. Previously, smartcard technology was only available to governments and Fortune 500 companies. Access Smart has turned that model upside down by matching the technology to the needs, no annual subscription fees and fully transferable licenses to keep security affordable to even high employee/student turnover businesses. The Access Smart team has over 50 combined years in the smartcard and security industry. By addressing the very real problems from a systems mindset, Access Smart delivers everything for a company to implement AaaS within hours and not months/years. Please contact Dovell Bonnett at Access Smart as to discuss how best to implement Authentication, Authorization and Non-Repudiation into your business. Access Smart - The Alternative to PKI. Click here to visit Dovell's website My 3 Top Security Strategies for 2012 The Growing Threat of Medical Identity Theft Protecting Your Company From An Online Data Breach Preventing Physical Identity Theft Is Your Cloud Provider Sidestepping Security |
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