Employees tell friends company secrets
New survey finds that staff will spill the beans with corporate info to friends.
Eight per cent of employees would happily share sensitive information with friends at rival companies, according to a new survey.
The research carried out by web security company Websense found that one in twelve workers would pass on confidential information about the company they worked for to mates in rival firms.
The study found that 51 per cent of respondents felt it very unlikely their company would realise or have the facilities to monitor whether critical data had been wrongly or accidentally distributed outside the company.
Nearly a third (31 per cent) have tried to guess an administrator password on their PC, with 21 per cent admitting trying to access protected files, including Finance and HR data.
The research found that 46 per cent have allowed friends and family to use their company laptop, which the company said "allowed one-click access to their company's sensitive information."
52 per cent of respondents have tried to hack into colleagues' email accounts.
"It is a real eye opener to realise that so many UK employees are willing to put aside confidentiality agreements for friends," said , Frank Coggrave, regional director at Websense. "When you see that over half of the people surveyed had tried to hack into a colleague's email account, this should start alarm bells ringing for many companies."
Sign up today and you will receive a free copy of our Future Focus 2026 report - the leading resource for IT decision-maker insight on priorities and investment areas in AI, security and more.
He said that even if these actions are completely innocent, the implications are huge for companies leaving their data security to chance.
"There are so many potential holes in security that can expose an organisation. Not taking proactive steps to secure confidential data can lead to extremely costly information leaks," said Coggrave.
Rene Millman is a freelance writer and broadcaster who covers cybersecurity, AI, IoT, and the cloud. He also works as a contributing analyst at GigaOm and has previously worked as an analyst for Gartner covering the infrastructure market. He has made numerous television appearances to give his views and expertise on technology trends and companies that affect and shape our lives. You can follow Rene Millman on Twitter.
-
Ransomware cartels are fragmenting into volatile splinter groups, warns Met Police cyber chiefNews Commoditized "cyber crime bazaars" and AI data mining are forcing law enforcement to rewrite its playbook
-
The channel is heading straight for an AI infrastructure wallIndustry Insights AI ambition is accelerating faster than channel infrastructures, however data architecture and enterprise readiness can support
