The Middle East is becoming more and more connected as we continue to inject technology into every walk of life. Once thought of as part of the consumer market, mobile and IoT have migrated into the business world, and their presence in our infrastructure systems, such as the national grid and transport networks, shows it is of critical concern. With cyberthreats on the rise, the stakes could not be higher: We’re talking about the potential physical damage as well as digital data breaches.
Further, as the region becomes more and more affected by global privacy regulations (and before long, regional ones), we will see organisations under more pressure to focus on the privacy area and invest towards effective privacy programs. It’s therefore not surprising to see IT security step into the spotlight — for most it is now a board-level concern.
But security should not be thought of solely as keeping the threats out. Given IT security’s omnipresence in our lives, security teams are uniquely positioned to drive tremendous opportunities for the business, if they are brought into the heart of the digital business and given the appropriate tools to properly view and analyse data.
From IoT, to the cloud, to machine learning and automation, security and risk programs can be leveraged to reshape businesses in the Middle East, while overcoming the existing barriers to ensure safety and efficiency.
Based on RSA’s own research and discussions with partners and customers we see four key trends emerging in the year ahead:
Trend one: Consumer technologies at the core of the Enterprise
IoT started on the consumer side with wearable devices. However, security was at the low end of consideration and passwords were embedded at the factory level, which meant that most IoT devices were not secured. While data leaks due to poor security on consumer IoT devices may not pose that much risk (consumers may not care if the number of steps they took in a day are leaked), once these devices make their way into the business and enterprise use-cases, that risk grows.
Trend two: The rise of Shadow IT
Shadow IT, where systems and solutions are built and used inside organizations without explicit organizational approval, is a growing digital risk in the region, and we will potentially see data breaches next year targeting organizations through this growing exposure surface.
Smaller teams within the same organization are doing things their own way. Craving more agility and faster delivery, they end up creating their own IT environment that is usually cloud-based and unmanaged by the IT infrastructure team and outside the scope of the risk and compliance teams. Shadow IT creates a backdoor and it’s a growing danger.
Organizations in the Middle East must not ignore the presence of such environments, and start taking measures to reduce the risks.
Trend three: The accelerated rate in cloud adoption
The Middle East market has been slower to adopt the cloud as it has been portrayed as something unsafe. But adoption is now growing, as it’s no longer a choice for the business. It’s a reality.
In the next year, cloud adoption will accelerate significantly, and organizations will have more confidence in the cloud overall. This will put pressure on regional organizations to keep themselves secure through the transition. This includes ensuring their identity and access management remains up to par, and that their risk programs expand to cover third party.
Trend four: Targeting Critical infrastructure will continue
Attacks on SCADA systems and critical infrastructure will increase, and the risk of causing physical damage beyond the digital one will also increase. SCADA and IoT security will become a significant area of investment in the region. We have seen a list of targeted attacks against critical infrastructure. Traditionally isolated infrastructure, but as OT and modern IT systems converge, the “It’s isolated, so it’s secure” concept becomes a myth.
SCADA systems are quite outdated and the potential damage is immense — whilst a phishing attack leading to data theft can be very harmful to organisations; attacks on critical infrastructure are on a whole new level. Physical damage can be caused to critical infrastructure posing threat to human life — e.g., crippling national services, major power cuts, air or road traffic incidents.
Within this, of course, is huge opportunity. For example, consider how the safe monitoring of a city’s IoT infrastructure (internet-connected traffic lights within a congested city, for example) creates huge implications for human well-being.
How businesses can get ahead and focus on the opportunity
If you are launching a new digital process or adopting a new technology for an enterprise use case, it is essential that:
- Your business implements a holistic risk-based approach. Here, you must identify who is going to use it and what type of risk is likely, including the areas of highest risk that require the most attention.
- Apply controls to tighten basic security that comes with IoT and add visibility tools so any cyberbreach can be detected and responded to effectively.
- Aim to achieve comprehensive visibility of what’s going on across the whole environment including third party providers.
The risks will vary by industry. For example, with autonomous vehicles, the risks are too high. We must monitor vehicle-to-infrastructure communication, and vehicle-to-vehicle communication because road and people safety depend on the accuracy of this information exchange. The potential issues here are immense should that communication is compromised. But think also about the opportunities, to revolutionise the way that citizens can be transported around their city. Security fears should never be used as a barrier to progress.
Risk, if tamed well, can be used to your advantage and to find new opportunities. If you understand what your risks are, you can make the best decisions.
Security promotes trust and it is an accelerator for innovation.
The role of automation
From a security technology perspective, the focus continues to be on enhancing detection and response by gaining more visibility. UEBA, machine learning and AI-powered technology will witness more adoption, empowering organizations to detect faster and respond more efficiently.
AI and machine learning are not there to replace the human security analysts. It’s not “Skynet”. These technologies are there to take away routine tasks, and free up our teams to innovate as time-consuming tasks are reduced. For example, new team members in the SOC can be recommended a course of action via an AI or machine learning driven orchestration, for similar incidents witnessed previously.
Machine learning can analyse large volumes of transactional data for online users to detect abnormal deviation and to limit online fraud.
UEBA in the enterprise access world learns pattern of user behaviour and understands what good looks like, so that when behaviour steps outside of the norm, a step-up action can be automated to protect that user access.
2019 and Beyond
Middle East governments, and those mainly in the Gulf Corporation Council (GCC), are pioneering the adoption of new technologies. In addition to IoT and others, consider the use case of blockchain as the main technology to provide their future services. There are also strong regional aspirations for governments to become the main hubs for Cryptocurrency.
This pioneering attitude is amazing to witness and to be part of, but as with any technology in its infancy in the enterprise use cases, the risks are high if holistic security is not well considered as that would expand exposure during the initial stages of this technology’s delivery.
In today’s digital world, the nature of security and risk landscape are constantly changing. However, if cybersecurity and digital risk management are brought into the fold, effectively managed and embedded at the heart of these innovations, we will see a world of new possibilities.
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