U.S. security professionals value their personally identifiable information more than twice as much as their U.K. counterparts
CHICAGO - December 14, 2017- Trustwave today released the "Value of Data Report," a sponsored research report conducted by industry analyst firm Quocirca. This global study includes a survey of 500 information technology (IT) decision makers in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia and Japan, examining attitudes towards the value of confidential data including: personally identifiable information (PII), payment card data, intellectual property (IP) and email. It reveals significant differences in both the level of vigilance applied to assessing and mitigating the level of risk, as well as the relative value attached by different verticals, countries, and stakeholders to various types of data.
Key highlights from the Value of Data Report from Trustwave include:
Trustwave Vice President of Security Research Ziv Mador said, "Today, data is one of the most valuable commodities possessed by any business. Whether that data belongs to the organization itself, its employees, suppliers or customers, it has a duty to protect that data to best of its ability. Companies that fail to accurately value their data are unlikely to make the right decisions regarding the level of cyber security investments to protect that data and are those most likely to fall short of regulations, such as the upcoming European Union General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) coming into effect in 2018. Businesses should look to the managed security services business model so that they have the confidence that full data risk vigilance is applied to all types of confidential and valuable data by specialists in the industry."
Bob Tarzey, senior security analyst at Quocirca and principal author of the study said, "Data is transforming businesses in the early 21st century in the same way electricity did at the start of the 20th. For nearly all businesses their PII and IP are essential assets that are enticing targets for criminals, those storing payment card data are the most tempting target. Data subjects, are becoming more aware of the value their data has to the businesses they deal with and are less forgiving when things go wrong. However, even as one data breach is eclipsed by another in the eye of the press, the regulators will continue to investigate the most serious as they are invested with more powers and the clout to issue ever greater fines."
Trustwave helps businesses fight cybercrime, protect data and reduce security risk. With cloud and managed security services, integrated technologies and a team of security experts, ethical hackers and researchers, Trustwave enables businesses to transform the way they manage their information security and compliance programs. More than three million businesses are enrolled in the Trustwave TrustKeeper® cloud platform, through which Trustwave delivers automated, efficient and cost-effective threat, vulnerability and compliance management. Trustwave is headquartered in Chicago, with customers in 96 countries. For more information about Trustwave, visit https://www.trustwave.com.
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