wonderfully unique software solutions

Webroot tips for staying safe while working remotely

Organisations should expect significant cybersecurity fallout from coronavirus within weeks or months, according to the Wall Street Journal. How can overstretched IT teams avoid this, when they’re having to set up whole teams to work from home?

Cybersecurity specialist Webroot back in 2019 outlined a few essential steps to tackle the increased risk posed by digital professionals working remotely – or the homebound knowledge worker or office assistant, for that matter.

First, consider best practice around public Wi-Fi networks. While some staff may have a properly secured home network, many consumers rely on relatively “open” connections with easily discoverable credentials – so it might as well be an airport or public hotspot.

“The massive and unresolved flaw in the WPA2 encryption standard used by modern Wi-Fi networks means that anyone connecting to a public network is putting themselves at risk,” writes Austin Castle, in his piece for Webroot.

That means virtual private networking (VPN) is essential to hide web traffic.

“A quality VPN app is simple to set up on your mobile devices and uses a strong encryption protocol to prevent hackers and other snoops from stealing important personal information such as account passwords, banking information, and private messages. VPNs will keep your data encrypted and secure from prying eyes, regardless of locale,” says Castle.

Ensure the use of strong passwords and multifactor authentication – and don’t forget about the risk of physical theft. Many big data breaches have resulted from the loss of a USB key, laptop or similar on a train or similar. Educate staff not only about the risk, but in how to protect their devices – or, at the least, the data and information they contain.

Remote workers should not only be reminded not to leave devices unattended – but should be using device trackers as well as backing up all data, all the time, in case of loss or theft.

“Devices should have a lock screen enabled, secured with either a pin or a biometric ID, such as your fingerprint. If you believe these efforts have failed and your device is compromised, enabling multifactor authentication on your most sensitive accounts should help reduce the effect of the breach.

“If you cannot recover your device, remotely wiping it will prevent any additional data from being accessed. If you have a device tracker enabled, you will be able to remotely wipe your sensitive data with that software,” he writes.

Ensure a data backup solution can recover any lost files. In addition, educate staff to switch off their Wi-Fi and other connectivity (such as Bluetooth) right after every work session, says Castle.

Recent Articles

Texthelp and n2y merge to grow global sales serving special needs

Literacy and assistive technology software vendor Texthelp and education management systems provider n2y have merged, in a move expected to retain Rothschild...

LANSA low-code helped these IT providers build their businesses

Even specialist IT companies use low-code strategies and technology to help them move up in their markets, gaining market share alongside the...

Foxit PDF editor suite expands AI capabilities for 2024

Smart PDF commands and enhanced AI assistant functionality are set to give the desktop and cloud versions of Foxit PDF Editor Suite...

Vyond bundles in further AI and branding capabilities for corporate creatives

Video creation platform vendor Vyond is expanding its offerings with new brand-management tools as well as further generative AI functionality responding to...

LastPass analyst warns of looming credentials crisis

Organisations should beware of an oncoming crisis in the secure management of user access, according to a cybersecurity specialist at password management...

Related Stories

Leave A Reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Weirdware monthly - Get the latest news in your inbox