2017: The Year Encryption Goes Wild

2017: The Year Encryption Goes Wild

Wow, another year goes by with even more monumental data breaches. Believe what you want about the election, the DNC hacks, the latest Yahoo breach revelation and the numerous other data thefts put even more business decision-makers in fear for their own company’s technology security. Leadership’s historical response to breaches has continued to be higher walls and wider moats. Maybe it’s time for a different (and maybe more affordably efficient) approach.

My prediction is 2017 will be the year Encryption Goes Wild – as in wider use by more enterprises, more users, and in more applications.  There have been some nice inroads over the past few years at better encryption for personal chat, but the record for these exact tools’ migration and deployment into the enterprise is abysmal. The scope of enterprise chat, messaging, and file sharing has completely different requirements from how you message your buddy or spouse with dinner plans.

The reasons encryption goes wild in 2017 are (1) enterprise user security fatigue means they regularly and repeatedly take unadvised technology risks in the spirit of “I need to get my job done,” (2) leadership team anxiety continues to grow from swelling, yet suspect effective, security budgets, (3) the growing realization by most IT professionals that the game has changed from “if we get hacked” to “when we got/get hacked,” and (4) encryption is the most affordable way to secure information both outside and inside the firewall.

Encryption technology has historically been something that only the most technical software engineers and developers discussed, but more and more it comes up in daily conversation and has become a front-and-center business opportunity. In 2017, encryption will go wild.

Encrypt everything

These days, most everyone in the enterprise deals with encryption at some level. Whether by ensuring they have a secure connection to an email server or that https is included in a website address, a majority of people wouldn’t argue against the fact that security is important. But while these practices are all good, they don’t address the wider issue.

Even though a hosted connection or a server might be secure, the company data hosted on the server is now at the mercy of the service provider. Similarly, when companies use a cloud-hosted group chat tool, that provider’s servers can collect, store and even analyze company data to learn about their customers. Even on-premise servers present a risk because insider threats are a legitimate possibility. In fact, the Ashley Madison hack and the NSA breach were both insider jobs.

In order to better protect from both internal and external threats, companies are realizing that end-to-end encryption is no longer just a nice-to-have; it’s a necessary safeguard against an almost inevitable breach. More and more services are offering end-to-end encryption, and we’re going to see this grow exponentially in the coming years.

Email for Internal Discussions is Showing its Age

Anyone familiar with the security industry knows that the history of end-to-end encrypted email is not pretty. No one has been able to successfully deploy any usable, fully encrypted email service, yet it’s the tool that businesses use most to communicate and collaborate on important documents. For many CIOs, this translates to more spending on firewalls and other external safeguards to reduce the risk of a breach. With rising awareness of the importance of encryption, however, companies are moving to alternative types of communication and file-sharing tools to protect their businesses.

Enterprise-deployable, end-to-end encrypted software that can be properly scaled is few and far between, but in 2017, we’ll continue to see more technology companies announcing secure software for the enterprise to address this need. Secure collaboration software, storage servers and chat tools are already gaining strong user bases. While email won’t ever be fully replaced any time soon, its position as the primary means of sharing internal company data is being recognized for how unsecure it is, and email usage is already declining.

Being a black hat becomes harder to hack

So a company has now ensured nearly all employee activity is done on fully encrypted applications, eliminated employee use of unsanctioned tools and reduced unnecessary spending on firewalls. Even in a scenario in which CIOs have rolled out every secure, deployable, verifiable encryption tool, a determined hacker can still find a weakness to exploit.

However, once they are able to infiltrate the system, they’ll find all services use end-to-end encryption, and that the only avenue for them is to try to breach a user’s end point. With this model, the only way a hacker can achieve a large-scale breach is to compromise nearly every single end point in the organization.

As a hacker, this raises some questions: How do I get into a network, have no one realize and compromise every device with no one noticing? This is even more difficult and time-consuming at scale, and there are no longer quick wins of getting all the information a company has to offer. As more enterprises roll out fully end-to-end encrypted systems in the coming year, hackers will have a hard time accessing the information they want.

Tear down that wall

End-to-end encrypted email was proven to be completely unusable, and we as an industry have abandoned efforts to deploy it successfully. With that failure has come the realization that bulletproof, future-resistant encryption is not only achievable, its already in use today. We’ve proven we don’t need two-step verification or USB dongles to create an experience that’s both user-friendly and secure, and we’ve shown there are ways to avoid using unencrypted services like email—such as encrypted chat—and still succeed at our jobs.

Rather than focusing on “building a wall” to secure their companies, CIOs that want to reduce risk should focus on using apps and tools that offer to fully encrypt corporate data – without storing keys – so that there are fewer security weaknesses to safeguard against in the first place.

Featured

  • Allegion, Comfort Technologies Implement Mobile Credentials at the Artisan Apartment Homes in Florida

    Artisan Apartment Homes, a luxury apartment complex in Dunedin, Florida, recently transitioned from mechanical keys to electronic locks and centralized system software with support from Allegion US, a leading provider of security solutions, technology and services, and Florida-based Comfort Technologies, which specializes in deploying multifamily access control, IoT devices and software management solutions. Read Now

  • Mall of America Deploys AI-Powered Analytics to Enhance Parking Intelligence

    Mall of America®, the largest shopping and entertainment complex in North America, announced an expansion of its ongoing partnership with Axis Communications to deploy cutting-edge car-counting video analytics across more than a dozen locations. With this expansion, Mall of America (MOA) has boosted operational efficiency, improved safety and security, and enabled more informed decision-making around employee scheduling and streamlining transportation for large events. Read Now

  • Security Industry Association Launches New “askSIA” AI Tool

    The Security Industry Association (SIA) has unveiled a brand-new SIA member benefit – askSIA, a conversational AI agent designed to help users get the most out of their SIA membership, easily access SIA resources and find the latest information on SIA’s training and courses, reports and publications, events, certification offerings and more. SIA members can easily find askSIA by visiting the SIA homepage or looking for the askSIA icon in the top left of webpages. Read Now

    • Industry Events
  • Industry Embraces Mobile Access, Biometrics and AI

    A combination of evolving workplace dynamics, technology innovation and new user expectations is changing how people enter and interact with physical spaces. Access control is at the heart of these changes. Combined with biometrics and AI, mobile access control has become increasingly crucial for deploying entry solutions that are seamless, secure and adaptive to user needs. Read Now

  • Sustainable Video Solution Delivered for Landmark City of London Office Development

    An advanced, end-to-end video solution from IDIS, with a focus on reducing waste and costs, has helped a major office development in the City of London align its security with sustainability objectives. Read Now

New Products

  • 4K Video Decoder

    3xLOGIC’s VH-DECODER-4K is perfect for use in organizations of all sizes in diverse vertical sectors such as retail, leisure and hospitality, education and commercial premises.

  • QCS7230 System-on-Chip (SoC)

    QCS7230 System-on-Chip (SoC)

    The latest Qualcomm® Vision Intelligence Platform offers next-generation smart camera IoT solutions to improve safety and security across enterprises, cities and spaces. The Vision Intelligence Platform was expanded in March 2022 with the introduction of the QCS7230 System-on-Chip (SoC), which delivers superior artificial intelligence (AI) inferencing at the edge.

  • Connect ONE’s powerful cloud-hosted management platform provides the means to tailor lockdowns and emergency mass notifications throughout a facility – while simultaneously alerting occupants to hazards or next steps, like evacuation.

    Connect ONE®

    Connect ONE’s powerful cloud-hosted management platform provides the means to tailor lockdowns and emergency mass notifications throughout a facility – while simultaneously alerting occupants to hazards or next steps, like evacuation.