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Latest coverage for Security Awareness

Security awareness covers how people recognize and avoid phishing, social engineering, unsafe practices, and other causes of cybersecurity incidents.

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Security awareness is the ability of people in an organization to recognize security risks and make safer decisions when using systems, handling information, or communicating. It covers practical behavior such as checking unexpected login requests, protecting credentials, verifying payment or access changes through trusted channels, limiting sensitive data exposure, and reporting suspected phishing or social engineering promptly. Awareness is not a guarantee that users will avoid every mistake; it reduces risk when guidance is relevant to people’s roles and workflows.

Security practitioners assess awareness through targeted education, realistic exercises, clear reporting paths, and measures such as reporting quality and time to escalation—not merely course completion. News under this tag may therefore concern phishing and impersonation campaigns, unsafe handling of personal or confidential data, policy changes, or lessons from incidents involving human decisions. Effective programs should reinforce technical controls such as multifactor authentication and least privilege, while avoiding blame: users need simple procedures for verifying requests, reporting errors, and obtaining help before a mistake becomes an intrusion.

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Bank Info Security 2 years, 2 months ago

Human Risk Crisis: 8% of Employees Cause 80% of Incidents

Mimecast's Masha Sedova on Using a Metrics-Driven Approach to Mitigate Human RiskMore than two-thirds of breaches involve the human element. Traditional security awareness initiatives, often fixated on training participation and engagements, are inadequate in mitigating incidents triggered by employees' risky behaviors, said Mimecast's Masha Sedova.