- Get four Apple AirTags for just $73 with this Black Friday deal
- I tested Beats' new Pill speaker and it delivered gloriously smooth sound (and it's on sale for Black Friday)
- I tested a 'luxury' nugget ice maker, and it's totally worth it - plus it's $150 off for Black Friday
- The Dyson Airwrap is $120 off ahead of Black Friday - finally
- This 5-in-1 charging station replaced several desk accessories for me (and it's 33% off for Black Friday))
22% of cybersecurity professionals have ignored an alert
Security leaders’ cybersecurity preparedness was analyzed in a recent report by Coro. According to the survey, 73% of SME security professionals have missed, ignored or failed to act on critical security alerts, with respondents noting a lack of staff and a lack of time as the top two reasons.
The report found the following concerns among cybersecurity professionals:
- 35% of respondents admitted to having missed a security alert at work.
- 31% turned down the sensitivity on a security tool
- 26% muted a security alert entirely
- 25% have failed to act on a high-priority alert, and 22% have ignored a security alert entirely.
Respondents gave feedback on the most time-consuming parts of their day, including:
- monitoring security platforms
- managing and updating endpoint devices and agents
- vulnerability management or patching
- installing, configuring and integrating new security tools.
According to the report, respondents spend an average of four hours and 43 minutes managing their cybersecurity tools every day, with an average 11.55 tools in their security stack. Fifty-two percent of respondents said the most time-consuming task was monitoring security platforms, followed by vulnerability patching.
Respondents estimated it takes 4.22 months for a new cybersecurity tool to become operational; with equal time spent on installation, configuration, training staff and integration with their existing security stack. On average, respondents manage 2029.91 end point security agents installed across 655.92 endpoint devices. Fifty-three percent of respondents must deal daily or weekly with vendors’ updates of these endpoint agents. Eighty-five percent of respondents say they are looking to consolidate their tools in the next 12 months. The most important benefit cited was improving their security posture.