A quarter of IT managers at small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs)
throughout Europe believe that employees are ultimately responsible for IT
security breaches, according to new research.
The SMB State of Security report from security firm
Websense
surveyed 750 IT managers and employees at companies with 100-250 employees in
the UK, Germany, France, Italy and The Netherlands.
Although employees acknowledge that they spend an average of two and a half
hours a week surfing the web for pleasure, just under half of the IT managers
surveyed use web filtering software to protect against web-based threats.
Twenty-three per cent of SMEs have internet usage policies in place, although
they do not require an employee to officially sign the policy.
A further 16 per cent admitted to having no usage policy at all, saying that
trust in their employees was sufficient to prevent abuse.
Yet nearly a third of IT managers rated 'employee behaviour' as the leading
cause of job frustration when it comes to implementing and maintaining IT
security.
'IT security not being high enough up the corporate agenda' was the second
highest at 27 per cent, and 'budget constraints' came in third at 21 per cent.
A few respondents believe that SMEs should have less protection in place than
large organisations because they are exposed to lower levels of risk and do not
have the budget.
But the vast majority (71 per cent) felt that all companies should have equal
levels of protection irrespective of their size.
"We urge all SMEs to make IT security a business-critical issue," said Mark
Murtagh, technical director at Websense.
"Leaving their employees to make security decisions based on what they feel
is right is not only putting company confidential data at risk, but adding a
strain to the IT department.
"Internet usage policies need to be automated to ensure that hidden dangers
are found and protected against."
The research also revealed that the majority of SME employees are placing a
false sense of security in their IT department, as two-thirds trust their
company to protect them from internet-based security threats.
Only 31 per cent of employees who have used a personal credit card at work
have questioned the IT department about whether their PC is protected against
identity theft.
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