{"id":13171,"date":"2017-06-28T19:26:07","date_gmt":"2017-06-28T19:26:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/digital-sentinel.com\/?p=13171"},"modified":"2017-10-01T10:33:06","modified_gmt":"2017-10-01T10:33:06","slug":"avoiding-mistakes-save-organisation-money-time-reputation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/digital-sentinel.com\/uncategorized\/avoiding-mistakes-save-organisation-money-time-reputation\/","title":{"rendered":"Avoiding these mistakes could save your organisation money, time and reputation"},"content":{"rendered":"
The threat landscape is changing with criminals targeting financial targets such as banks, payment processors, retailers, hotels, and anywhere where point of sale terminals are used. But regular users and small and medium-sized businesses are still in the firing line when it comes to financial cybercrime.<\/p>\n
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According to a whitepaper published by Kaspersky (download<\/a>), the share of financial phishing increased 13.14 percentage points to 47.48% of all phishing detections in 2016.<\/p>\n So, what are the five biggest security mistakes you can make, and how do you avoid them.<\/p>\n Bad password and security question policies<\/strong><\/p>\n Hackers will always try the easy things first, this means passwords and security questions that are easy to guess. A security administrator should ensure that any passwords used are easily guessable and security questions should avoid the typical mother\u2019s maiden name questions when it comes to resetting passwords. The best ones are long but still easy to use. Don\u2019t make the mistake of making too many demands on users, else they will probably forget their passwords.<\/p>\n Also, make sure that users don\u2019t use the same password for everything. Hackers rely on people user the same password so they can access various systems without too much effort.<\/p>\n