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1 in 5 UK Workers Believe Hackers do a Worthwhile Job and More Than a Quarter Would Pass on Confidential Data if They Don’t Trust Their Employer

May 2014 by Courion

Courion announced the findings of a research study revealing that a third of UK professionals are likely to consider risky behaviours that endanger or undermine data protection.

The research was conducted by OnePoll and based on surveying 1000 UK employees who have access to customer data at work. The results suggest a lack of awareness of basic data protection policies and worrying behaviours such as snooping on sensitive personal information and sharing work login details with colleagues.

While the majority of the respondents recognise that hackers are criminals, 1 in 5 believe hackers do a worthwhile job by exposing security defects that should have been fixed by organisations. Notably the younger generation holds this view more than their older counterparts with a quarter of 18-24 respondents supporting this view. This age gap is significant throughout the findings with the younger Millennial generation sometimes twice as likely to be more cavalier with their access habits. For example, 30% of the 18-24 years old respondents would snoop on sensitive customer data at work compared to only 12% of the 45-54 years old employees.

“The results point to a worrying lack of understanding of the importance of adhering to strict data protection guidelines,” said Chris Zannetos, CEO and Founder of Courion.

“As organisations are opening their networks to an increasing number of external users and employees, ensuring tougher controls on how access to sensitive data is granted, monitored and controlled is vital to preventing security breaches.”

“Instead of relying on the good intentions of their employees, businesses should consider deploying technologies that can automatically enforce data protection policies and use data insight to dynamically monitor and analyse access risk,” he added.

The research also revealed that men are more reckless than women when it comes to breaching their employer’s data protection policies. Male employees are twice more likely to access the database of an old employer if they still have access rights and more likely to pass on confidential information for money or if they feel they’ve been treated unfairly (36% men vs. 21% women).

Additional data from the research revealed that:

 27% of UK professionals believe that the Morrisons employee was right to steal payroll data in the security breach that took place in March this year

 30% of employees would pass on confidential information about their employer if they suspected they were involved in illegal activity

 39% of people share work login details with colleagues despite the regular warnings about protecting passwords

 A third (33%) of UK professionals would consider accessing a previous employer’s data to help them with a new job

 A third (33%) would access or download information from a previous employer using an old password

 21% of UK professionals would snoop on sensitive personal data if they have access to it


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