Web Hosting Journal

Security Expectation for 2019!

Security Expectation

Security is the utmost importance for everyone! With the increase in the number of cases of data breaches in the corporate world. The malware, Trojans, and viruses are also creating havoc on the systems, businesses leading to huge losses. Here today we have summed up the expectations of the major industry leaders about what likely would be major IT security developments in the year 2019.

“Large companies spend a lot on cybersecurity, and what do they get? Equifax and Marriott. Small and medium-sized companies don’t invest in cybersecurity and the result can even be more disastrous where they go out of business … big corporations purchase a large number of security products. Many of these products do not work together. Some have a very low return on investment. While they are managing all of these products, they then miss out on doing some of the basics. … Small and medium-sized companies don’t necessarily have a security policy, strong password management, good patching cadence or cybersecurity training. These are the low hanging fruit that can help to prevent serious cybersecurity issues at their organization. … I expect that companies will continue … misallocation [of] resources for cybersecurity. Whether it is chasing the next great cybersecurity product or not taking basic precautions, 2019 will be the year of misaligned cybersecurity investment.”

— Rob Black – Founder and Managing Principal of Fractional CISO

“Organizations need to get back to basics. They have a puzzle of multiple solutions and vendors, whose technologies are not coordinated. They need to reduce complexity in security operations by adding a single automated, orchestrated holistic solution.”

— Itay Yanovski, founder, and SVP of Strategy at CyberInt

“After the sheer amount of [identity] theft in 2018, 2019 will be no different. Expect at least 3 more major hacks with over 1 billion accounts taken in the coming year. Corporations will pump as much budget as possible to prevent from being the next company in the news cycle. It still won’t be enough though, so expect some big company names in the news.”

— Mark Enzor, President of Geeks 2 You

“We believe that cybersecurity will become more intelligence-driven in 2019. In a world of fast-moving, automated attacks, intelligence is the key to being able to respond swiftly or even predictively, rather than reactively, to individual threats. Additionally, it will allow for the organization’s overall cybersecurity posture to change dynamically in response to the changing threat landscape … Machine learning will play a critical role in gathering intelligence. Moreover, machines will start making more of their own decisions and execute changes themselves to minimize an organization’s cyber-risk, based on this intelligence.”

— Matt Gyde, Group Executive – Cybersecurity at Dimension Data

“In short, cybersecurity in 2019 is going to be less passive. Instead of putting the chair under the doorknob in an attempt to stop the intrusion, the entire building will become armored and move around, pushing the defense into the face of intrusion. It will do so, however, invisibly and anonymously. The future of cybersecurity is being connected yet seeming apart. That is, if no one suspects all the pieces of working together, no one will see anything worth attacking.”

— Chris Mindel, Marketing Manager at Dexter Edward LLC.

“Healthcare will be the fastest growing sector for cybersecurity vendors overall. Also, data privacy/protection will be big in 2019. We saw the first GDPR fines in late 2018, and we see an emergence of dedicated solutions to come. We see more and more concern about GDPR and related data privacy legislation. As we see the first fines in Europe for organizations that failed to comply with GDPR, we believe that the budgets for technological solutions will emerge dramatically in the next couple of years and predict that this will be one of the hottest trends in 2019 (emerging startups in the cybersecurity industry).”

— Ofer Schreiber, Partner at YL Ventures

“Enterprises will increase their efforts to control employee communications channels. New labor laws and GDPR cross-border data transfer violations will cost organizations dearly in the year ahead, both in fines as well as reputation, if IT teams can’t segment and protect data by WHAT its level of sensitivity is, WHERE data access must be restricted, WHEN access is appropriate and WHO in the organization can see it. In 2019, we will see companies focus on this need in order to avoid data breaches, legal and regulatory violations, and reputation-deflating public disclosures.”

— Aaron Turner, CEO of Hotshot Technologies

“2019 may be a turning point in the world of cybersecurity. Between an explosion in connected devices, increasingly bold threat actors, and the ever-increasing number of headline-grabbing data breaches, there are many paradigms that will shift over the next year. One of the most compelling changes will be the active role taken by legislators to create robust security and privacy regulations, much in the model of the EU’s GDPR. Not only will privacy play a central role, but as we continue to understand the importance of cybersecurity to our national security, we will see increased regulation in businesses of all sizes to adopt cybersecurity regulations, much like the recent DoD cybersecurity requirement for contractors. While the technical elements of security are ever changing and interesting, the role of regulation is critical to ensuring a mature response to a changing environment. While we are unlikely to get everything right on the first go, it is important to engage other stakeholders in the conversation, not merely technical and business experts.”

— Benjamin Dynkin, cybersecurity attorney and founder of Atlas Cybersecurity

“In the age of GDPR and more data security governance, there are going to be critical benchmarks enterprises will have to meet including data leak prevention and data integrity. There are many tools out there and there are strict criteria that must be adhered to or as we have seen with the big players like Facebook and Google, there will be huge fines levied against them. Technology trends upcoming will see a lot more private and hybrid clouds set up especially in the government, healthcare, and financial sectors.”

— Jackie Rednour-Bruckman, CMO – MyWorkDrive

“In 2019 we’re going to see security engineering and automation enter the mainstream with enterprise IT. The dynamic nature of enterprise cloud operations has outstripped the ability of humans to ensure systems are secure – at least not without sacrificing agility and efficiency. Expect to see cloud security move beyond manual checklists, monitoring, and alerts, as it embraces new approaches like automated remediation of cloud misconfiguration and policy-as-code validation checks before systems, go into production. Forward-thinking CISOs understand that ‘shifting left’ isn’t just about security, but about enabling innovation and staying competitive.”

— Phillip Merrick, CEO at Fugue

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