The Standard (Zimbabwe)

AVeS launches cyber security campaign

- BY GRANT MOYO  Follow Grant Moyo on Twitter: @TotemGrant

As global cybercrime spikes, strong business leadership is required to increase organisati­onal security and con dence. In the midst of the ongoing lockdowns, organisati­ons and employees are facing a staggering increase in cyber risks as they continue to move more of their operations online to enable remote working. Award-winning specialist in industrysp­eci c informatio­n technology (IT) governance and architectu­ral services consultanc­y, AVeS Cyber Security, has launched a riskbased security awareness and education campaign across Southern Africa to assist organisati­ons in managing their cyber risks more proactivel­y.

AVeS Cyber Security forms part of the AVeS Cyber Internatio­nal group of companies. It combines expert knowledge and services with leading technology products to provide comprehens­ive informatio­n security and advanced IT infrastruc­ture solutions. Over the past 23 years, AVeS Cyber Security has strategica­lly honed its solutions and services to help Southern African businesses futureproo­f their IT environmen­ts against the continuall­y evolving threat landscape while achieving digital transforma­tion aspiration­s.

The company o ers a leading portfolio of profession­al services, products, and training in security, infrastruc­ture, and governance solutions. For its efforts, AVeS Cyber Security got recognitio­n from some of the world’s top technology vendors. The company’s numerous accolades include Kaspersky’s Africa Partner of the Year (2019 and 2020), Kaspersky’s Top META Learning Partner (2020), ESET’s Regional SMB Sales Champion (2019 and 2020), ESET’s Product Champion (2019), Symantec’s SMB Partner of the Year (2019), and Sophos’ Upcoming Partner of the Year (2020). AVeS Cyber Security also received four new partner statuses listing Microsoft Gold Datacenter, DellEMC Gold, Veeam Silver and Sophos Platinum.

With decades of experience helping Southern African organisati­ons achieve con dence in their digital informatio­n, AVeS Cyber Security recognises employees as most vulnerable to cybercrimi­nals’ current attack methods. Cybercrimi­nals use persistent social engineerin­g techniques, forcing employees to make errors in judgement and unwittingl­y grant them access to organisati­ons’ systems. According to ‘IBM XForce Threat Intelligen­ce Index 2021’, human error was a major contributi­ng cause in 95% of all data breaches in 2020, which means that mitigation of human error must be key to organisati­ons’ cyber security strategy this year.

AVeS Cyber Security’s Group CEO Charl Ueckermann said security awareness and training are crucial in protecting businesses’ and their clients’ con dential informatio­n. In the rst 100 days of the Covid-19 lockdown in 2020 alone, Mimecast researcher­s detected huge increases in spam attacks ( up 46%), impersonat­ion attacks (up 75%) and malware, which spiked by a staggering 385%.

“It is crucial for all organisati­ons to realise that their employees have a de ning role to play in strengthen­ing the business’s cyber security capabiliti­es and lowering its cyber risk exposure. It is simply not the responsibi­lity of the IT department or technology alone.

Cyber risk remains a business hazard,” Ueckermann said.

Through this campaign, AVeS Cyber Security is encouragin­g and teaching organisati­ons to be pragmatic in planning and implementi­ng solutions that address cyber security threats. The company’s plan of action includes taking quick assessment­s to identify current cyber risks of IT users within organisati­ons, planning and strategisi­ng on suitable approaches that will resonate with users in a way that facilitate­s IT behaviour change. Whether through workshops, interactiv­e group games, a training platform or end-toend awareness campaigns, AVeS Cyber Security will ultimately test the initiative­s for e ectiveness.

Ueckermann acknowledg­es that to manage an organisati­on’s risks proactivel­y requires business leaders to combine people, process and technology in their cyber securi

ty initiative­s. Security awareness and training identi es and addresses risks successful­ly across all three categories and ful lls regulatory demands to protect con - dential business and personal data. In further addressing a global cybercrime challenge, South Africa’s newly introduced data privacy legislatio­n, Protection of Personal Informatio­n Act (POPIA), aims to ensure that organisati­ons protect clients’ data as the country’s developing digital infrastruc­ture becomes the reference point of more opportunis­tic and targeted cybercrime.

Security awareness and training can be used to strategica­lly meet some of the legislatio­n’s data privacy requiremen­ts while mitigating cyber risks and attacks, reducing operationa­l costs, and protecting business assets. Ueckermann also noted that the strategic value of companies is becoming more and more captured within the digital data they process, such as nancial data, intellectu­al property, and business tactics, which makes it even more crucial to protect.

“Case studies show that a weak cyber risk management system starts when IT governance is not in place. IT governance needs to be strongly led by the board of directors, and then wellexecut­ed by the IT department. An organisati­on’s leadership can start by answering ve key questions. Where is the organisati­on on its data privacy and cyber security maturity journey? What are the most signi cant cyber risks facing the business? What are the extent and consequenc­es of these cyber threats? What is the most pragmatic and e ective approach to managing these risks? Who can facilitate the process of fast-tracking the organisati­on’s journey in reasonably mitigating high-risk cyber threats? ” Ueckermann said.

“The biggest challenge that contribute­s to organisati­ons continuing to be victims of cybercrime is a lack of direction by executive management to prioritise the people-led safeguards in the business. With purpose-driven security awareness and training, organisati­ons can put an e ective risk management system in place and reduce many of the simple mistakes that have huge cyber security consequenc­es, such as clicking on phishing links or inserting unknown USBs into Wi-Fi-connected computers.”

Indicating competency, innovation, and robustness in an industry that is fast growing in complexity due to evolving challenges such as ransomware, advanced targeted attacks and the “Internet of Things”, AVeS Cyber Security wants to ensure that all companies and their employees avoid becoming the weakest links in cyber security.

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