Cybersecurity should be front of mind for accountants. Accounting professionals have a role to play in educating their clients about avoiding financial and identity scams, and they handle sensitive financial and personal data about clients, their businesses, employees and suppliers.
Accounting professionals need to be proactive in protecting that data, with best practice cybersecurity tools as well as training to identify false information and scams.
Financial Accountant released a self-guided quiz earlier this year to help readers assess their level of cybersecurity protection.
We’ve collected the results, which shine a light on areas that may need further attention, and asked Prashant Haldankar, Chief Information Security Officer at Sekuro, to suggest starting points for improvement.
1. VPN use
Forty-seven per cent of respondents don’t have a VPN.
This is cause for concern, said Haldankar, as a VPN provides a basic level of protection.
“It’s how you log in securely to your trusted network and access confidential resources that you’ve been allowed to access,” said Haldankar. “When the pandemic hit, many organisations were not ready with remote access through a VPN. Surprisingly, many organisations are still putting together systems to enable secure access for remote workers.”
One critical point is to continually update your level of cybersecurity protection, including VPN access.
“It’s not a point-in-time exercise. It needs to be regularly reviewed and updated to ensure you have the right protection for your organisation.”
2. Verifying against malicious activity
Eighty-four per cent of respondents use detection software, such as anti-malware, authentication logs and phishing email filters, to detect malicious activity.
Haldankar isn’t surprised that organisations are fairly mature in this domain due to widespread discussion about the risks in email and internet access in the early 2000s.
“Education about the first line of defence was very prevalent when we started having more conversations about cybersecurity,” said Haldankar. “Email content filtering and web access controls were considered basic security requirements. Those technologies were heavily leveraged.”
Nowadays, newer technologies such as AI tools are built into email to flag potential phishing attempts.
Those AI tools, explained Haldankar, are based on behavioural testing.
“For example, it will look at the pattern of how I write emails and, if it detects something abnormal, it will identify where it’s coming from.”
3. Encrypting confidential data
Once the first line of defence has been compromised, attackers will attempt to reach further into an organisation.
That’s why encrypting confidential data is critical – something that just over half (51.3%) of respondents say they do.
“Attackers’ main objective is to get to an organisation’s critical data. Encryption makes it difficult for the attacker to access the encrypted information.”
Similar to multifactorial authentication, encrypting data has become commonplace, so Haldankar is surprised that around half of respondents haven’t yet taken this step.
“It’s an essential foundation of cybersecurity. Your critical data should be encrypted. Many organisations are also encrypting their end devices such as mobile phones and laptops. Because you deal with so much information locally on laptops as well.”
4. Cybersecurity training
Forty-six per cent of respondents don’t have cybersecurity training available for staff.
Haldankar believes organisations often hold back from rolling out cybersecurity training because of the perception that it’s highly technical.
“They think it’ll be a large and complex exercise to get trained in cybersecurity, but cyber-awareness does not need to come hand-in-hand with extra technical expertise,” he says.
The same applies to cybersecurity champions in a particular team or department.
“Basic education and training can be enough to give a champion in each business unit the knowledge to stop an attack before it happens. When a staff member gets something unusual that could be a cyberattack, they should be equipped with some basic information to detect and report it to a cybersecurity expert.”
He also emphasises that training should to be up-to-date.
“[Training] goes a long way in building cybersecurity capabilities within an organisation to detect those attacks and try to avoid them in the very early stages.”
It’s not just employees, but also partners, clients and suppliers, who can benefit from cybersecurity awareness.
“Organisations should share their defence strategy and create awareness. A lot of incidents occur at the supplier level rather than in the organisation itself.”
5. Multifactorial authentication
Multifactorial authentication is becoming the norm, said Haldankar, so it’s little surprise that 66% of respondents have rolled out two-factor authentication.
“Many organisations have taken it on as a standard way of accessing the network. It’s not costly technology and we should be urging organisations to adopt multi-factor authentication to access the network, not only remotely, but locally as well when they’re in their offices.”
For those organisations that haven’t rolled out multifactorial authentication, or are evaluating the effectiveness of their current processes, Haldankar recommends creating a comprehensive cybersecurity plan that takes into account an organisation’s level of risk.
“You need to measure, identify and evaluate where the sensitive data resides, what the intellectual property, existing technology systems and processes are, as well as the level of cyber-awareness among staff and contractors.”
The level of authentication (ie, if you have two or more levels of authentication) required will depend on the sensitivity of the data and the risks posed in your organisation.
“Conduct an assessment and create a defence plan. There are also technical solutions suited to an organisation’s risk appetite. Any cybersecurity plan should be looked at holistically.”
Note: This quiz was answered by members across IPA group in Australia, the UK and elsewhere around the world.