The cyber-security landscape is ever shifting, with new threats hurtling into vision on a regular basis. To deal with these threats, organisations need agile and comprehensive security strategies – covering the entire spectrum of endpoints, networks, data centres, applications and access control.
This is the view of Anton Jacobsz, managing director at value-added distributor, Networks Unlimited Africa, which assists local businesses with a broad spectrum of cyber-defence solutions.
“As we evolve towards digitally-focused businesses, towards digital economies, the very nature of value changes. Data is well and truly the currency of the future,” says Jacobsz.
“Consider for a moment which is worse: somebody breaking into your house and stealing all your physical belongings, or somebody gaining access to your entire digital world – passwords, data, conversations and the like?”
For many of us, we’d probably prefer to lose our physical ‘stuff’.
A series of unfortunate global events
For companies, organisations and governments, it’s a similar dynamic. When it comes to cyber-breaches, Jacobsz says that 2017 was the most destructive year in history, headlined by these high-profile calamities:
And on the local front…
And South Africa did not escape 2017 cyberattack-free. A hack on the local Deeds Office’s database saw the personal details of millions of citizens - including ID numbers, contact details, addresses, and income estimates – being exposed on the Dark Web.
Ransomware, a type of malicious software designed to block access to a computer system until a sum of money is paid, was also on the increase last year, with South Africans falling victim to 15 million ransomware attacks. From a local business point of view, the median total cost of a ransomware attack last year was around R1.7 million including ransom, downtime, manpower, device cost, network cost, and lost opportunities, with 52 percent incurring costs above this level.
To put it into perspective, PwC’s sixth South African edition of the Global Economic Crime and Fraud Survey, for 2018, which came out earlier this year, states that South African organisations expect cybercrime to become the most disruptive form of economic crime in the next two years.
Growing complexity, new approaches
The scale of these attacks, and the thousands more that made the headlines, has forced organisations to think differently about how to protect data and digital assets.
“Traditional notions of perimeter defence must give way to a far more fluid and responsive strategy, where cyber-security is woven into the fabric of everything the organisation does, and where early detection and response is critical,” explains Jacobsz.
“As we bring more and more devices onto the network, organisations have a huge challenge to secure data as it traverses from endpoints – like laptops, smartphones and sensors – across various networks, into different hybrid cloud environments, to reach the data centre.”
It’s a far cry from the simple on-premise, client-server configurations of yesteryear. Jacobsz says that as the complexity grows, businesses need trusted ICT partners, and leading-edge security solutions, to keep pace with evolving threats.
At a high level, many organisations need to mature their threat intelligence capabilities very fast, to quickly detect any form of cyber-defence weakness, or any kind of attack. This should be supported with a concerted focus on security operations – harnessing automation, orchestration, advanced analytics, and data science technologies.
Practical tools to protect the organisation
Diving into the detail, Jacobsz highlights several solutions sets that operate in harmony, to provide organisations with a comprehensive, end-to-end security solution, with software that continually evolves in response to emerging threats:
“Many of today’s biggest emerging threats were unheard of just a few years ago, and we could certainly never have predicted cyber-attacks on the scale of those high-profile examples that we’ve seen lately,” adds Jacobsz.
“As we look toward to the future, it’s just as difficult to predict the direction of the next wave of attacks. The only possible strategy is to adopt the latest technologies, and keep security at the forefront of our thinking, remaining vigilant and responsive to threats as they appear.”
About Networks Unlimited Africa
Networks Unlimited Africa is a value-added distributor, offering the best and latest solutions within the converged technology, data centre, networking, and security landscapes. The company distributes best-of-breed products, including Arbor Networks, Attivo Networks, Cofense, Carbon Black, Fortinet, F5, Hypergrid, Mellanox Technologies, NETSCOUT, ProLabs, RSA, Rubrik, SevOne, Silver Peak, Thales and Uplogix. The product portfolio provides solutions from the edge to the data centre, and addresses key areas such as cloud networking and integration, WAN optimisation, application performance management, application delivery networking, Wi-Fi-, mobile- and networking security, load balancing, data centre in-a-box, and storage for virtual machines.
Since its formation in 1994, Networks Unlimited Africa has continually adapted to today's progressively competitive and evolving marketplace, and has reaped the benefits by being a leading value-added distributor (VAD) within the Sub-Saharan Africa market.