Friday, March 29, 2024

Top CyberSecurity Predictions For 2022

As we continue to see opportunities in the mass move to remote work, cyberattackers are updating their tactics, compelling cybersecurity security leaders to respond. Experts make their predictions about threat reduction, compliance, supply chain management, security spending and more.

Some Top Cyber Security Trends To Look Out For in 2022

As global economies look to exit the pandemic chaos, there is a cloud of uncertainty around navigating the new normal. While enterprises tout their efforts to accelerate digital transformation efforts, for security leaders in business there is a dark side to the rapid deployment of new technology.

Remote work, virtual meetings, hybrid cloud networks, and SaaS adoption have all brought about complex IT infrastructures that are opening up new threat avenues. Meanwhile, CSOs also must help ensure their organizations are in compliance with new regulations.

The recent onslaught of attacks, network vulnerabilities, and new compliance regimes means CSOs have their work cut out for them as they enter 2022. CSO has collected insights from analyst firms and industry experts to arrive at a list of top cybersecurity predictions for the year. 

1. Companies to prioritize supply chain resiliency, responsible sourcing

Threat actors are progressively targeting smaller vendors and suppliers, making supply chain, or third-party, breaches almost inevitable. There have been a growing number of reports of third-party incidents plaguing firms. “60% of organizations will use cybersecurity risk as a primary determinant in conducting third-party transactions and business engagements,” according to a Gartner prediction report. Before onboarding  new suppliers or renewing contracts, companies will demand agreement on policies stipulating that their vendors will assume the risk of third-party attacks, paying for costs of remediation, the report suggests.

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2. Privacy legislation will accelerate globally

As data residency continues to be one of the most important components of security, modern privacy laws could be expected to cover the personal information of 75% of the worldwide population, according to the Gartner prediction report. “The sheer scope of laws like GDPR, LGPD [Brazil’s general data protection law), and CCPA [the California Consumer Privacy Act] suggests that compliance officers will be managing multiple data protection legislation in various jurisdictions, and customers will want to know what kind of data is being collected and how it’s being used,” said the Gartner prediction report. According to Ben Smith, field CTO at network security company Netwitness, the flexibility of an organization’s IT architecture will become even more important as new privacy regulations are passed and enforced. “Regardless of your corporate size, if you are charged with securing your global organization, be thinking about your own architecture and where the data is collected, where it lives, and where it is handled,” Smith says.

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3. Hiring of resident compliance officers will pick up

As organizations face new regulations, there will be a demand for resident compliance officers to help navigate through the complex and evolving dictates. “Compliance officers will certainly rise on the recruiters’ agenda as regulatory bodies mandate there be a ‘single throat to choke,'” says Liz Miller, an analyst from Constellation Research. “Although, that’s exactly the opposite of what we need. What we do need are skilled tacticians and strategies, which can be trusted voices and leaders within (and across) an organization, capable of translating the complexity of new (and constantly shifting) global regulations into real business value for everyone from the CEO to the mailroom.”

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4. Bossware will affect employee engagement and insider threats

With a major chunk of the global workforce forced to work from home by the pandemic, there is an upsurge in the usage of software that allows supervisors to monitor employees at all times. This has upset the remote working ecosystem to some extent, escalating employee distress. “Tattleware (also bossware) will degrade employee experience by 5% and increase insider threats in 2022,” according to a security prediction report by Forrester. “Employee backlash will grow as firms overreach, leading to an appreciable drop in technology satisfaction and employee engagement.” This, according to the report, may also lead to CISOs overcorrecting by reducing the scope of insider threat programs, thereby increasing risks.

5. Security products, supplier management will be consolidated

With major business processes moving to complex cloud environments, there will be a push on the part of enterprises to streamline management of security product suppliers. According to the Gartner prediction report, enterprises will look to adopt cloud delivered secure web gateways (SWGs), cloud access security brokers (CASBs), zero trust network access (ZTNA), and firewall as a service (FaaS) capabilities from the same vendor. 

Vendors themselves will consolidate features formerly found in separate applications.  “The growing complexity of cloud, cloud-native and devops environments will also lead to consolidation of functionality, with vendors tackling use cases from IT observability for security to cloud security posture management (CSPM), cloud workload protection, cloud asset attack surface management, and more,” says Scott Crawford, research director for information security at 451 Research. 

6. Spending on threat detection and response to grow

As significant malware campaigns — including ransomware, spearphishing, and sideloading attacks — proliferated in 2021, CISOs started focusing on getting ahead of cyberattackers in order to protect their businesses.  “In 2022, we expect the many high-profile and far-reaching attacks in 2021 to drive further spending in threat detection and response — the area most frequently reported by respondents to our 451 Research Voice of the Enterprise: Information Security surveys, where they either have deployments in pilot/POC or plan to deploy in the next 6-24 months,” says 451’s Crawford. 

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7. Cyberinsurance premiums will increase

Cyber insurance will be more expensive, with premiums shooting up, in the wake of recent high-profile cyberattacks. “Cyberinsurances are much more expensive these days as costs surge, and are most likely to continue soaring,” says Constellation’s Miller.

While they do provide security coverage and have become a ‘must-have’ for organizations, they have also alerted the attackers to asking for even more ransom in the attacks, knowing it’s all covered.” Insurers, hurting from the losses assumed from old policies, are increasing prices by 25%-27% on average, she noted.

8. Use of CDT (customer data tokens) and BAT (basic attention tokens) to rise

Several experts have been predicting the launch of blockchain-enabled tokens as compensation to security-conscious customers for gathering and using their data. “In the coming few years, 25% of the Fortune Global 500 will employ blockchain-enabled CDT and BAT to compensate their customers,” according to a report by IDC.

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Steven Black (n0tst3)
Hello! I'm Steve, an independent security researcher, and analyst from Scotland, UK. I've had an avid interest in Computers, Technology and Security since my early teens. 20 years on, and, it's a whole lot more complicated... I've assisted Governments, Individuals and Organizations throughout the world. Including; US DOJ, NHS UK, GOV UK. I'll often reblog infosec-related articles that I find interesting. On the RiSec website, You'll also find a variety of write-ups, tutorials and much more!

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