{"id":152923,"date":"2016-11-28T09:27:00","date_gmt":"2016-11-28T14:27:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.ntegrait.com\/how-radically-changing-corporate-culture-can-optimize-security-communications-and-productivity\/"},"modified":"2024-02-06T11:49:28","modified_gmt":"2024-02-06T11:49:28","slug":"how-radically-changing-corporate-culture-can-optimize-security-communications-and-productivity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ntegrait.com\/how-radically-changing-corporate-culture-can-optimize-security-communications-and-productivity\/","title":{"rendered":"How Radically Changing Corporate Culture Can Optimize Security, Communications, and Productivity"},"content":{"rendered":"
The cybersecurity experts agree – don’t become cavalier or lax about security, thinking a disastrous cyber breach can’t happen to you. This is a HUGE mistake – and something the hackers bank on – that we’re easy prey, whether as unwitting individuals or an entire corporate culture in denial. Read Marc Goodman’s bestseller Future Crimes<\/em><\/a> if the experience of having your personal information hijacked doesn’t wake you up!<\/p>\n <\/p>\n First, it’s important to assume ALL your email is being read – and with the “hole” in Microsoft Windows 10<\/a> announced recently (giving hackers deep access – likely the source of the cyberattack on Gazelles’ Verne Harnish<\/a>), it’s not a sure bet that you can keep email safe even using VPNs (which are strongly recommended by Harnish since the infiltration of his computer via unsecured wireless network, so use them more diligently when you travel).<\/p>\n Harnish takes the position of Google and is building all his financial and sensitive-information protocols around one assumption – NO email is safe from some kind of cyber exfiltration. You may have heard of the many scams where invoices were intercepted and bank account info was changed – so your payables department thinks it’s paying a regular bill and wires the funds to the wrong account – ugh. One firm was defrauded $10 million this way. Another company was defrauded of $47 million<\/a> in a similar scam, so the threat is real, constant, and potentially costly to a disastrous degree.<\/p>\n Minimizing the Risk of Corporate Theft <\/strong><\/p>\n So, what can the average executive or user do to minimize risks like the Gazelles cyber breach and other examples of corporate financial theft? It’s a harsh reality, but ALL financial transactions now should be reviewed by CEOs via a phone call<\/strong> with TWO people. You should also take the time, via CEO Portal (get one if you don’t have one) and use an authenticator like a dongle (key) to OK the transactions.<\/p>\n Make sure NO sensitive info is sent via email – account numbers, credit card numbers, etc. – make a phone call instead. We’ve been lured into a false sense of security surrounded by high-tech hardware, when, ironically, picking up the phone is safer.<\/p>\n