Case Studies

Work time, personal matters

by Mark Rowe

The shifting boundaries between work and home life mean staff at many small businesses are unwittingly putting their employers at risk of cyber-attack, it is claimed. Four in five (82 per cent) of small business employees use work time for personal matters, over a third of them for more than two hours a day. That was according to a survey carried out by TalkTalk Business for Safer Internet Day last month.

TalkTalk Business surveyed 1,000 small business employees, of whom over 70 per cent admit taking work home on evenings and weekends, clocking up an average of 1.7 hours each day. With business commitments creeping into personal time, the vast majority of employees (82 per cent) are redressing the balance themselves by also catering to personal needs at work. Given that less than half of respondents feel they can spot obvious scams, this blurring of work and personal life has the potential to cause security headaches.

Modern scams are the telecoms firm says complex, and men appear less confident in their ability to identify them than women: 40 per cent of men say they’re easily able to recognise threats online, compared to 50 per cent of women. Somewhat ironically, employees in IT and telecoms are the least confident in their ability to spot risky content. This could be because they are often technically-trained and understand the complexity of modern viruses, therefore are less likely to underestimate them.

Checking the news, shopping online and “life admin” – tasks like booking travel or online banking – are the most common activities done on a work computer. While some respondents acknowledge the threat these actions could pose, the majority seem unaware: just under a third, 32 per cent, said shopping online while at work may be risky to the business, and only a quarter believe streaming music or video poses a danger to the company.

Charles Bligh, Managing Director of TalkTalk Business, said: “The traditional 9-5 is a fallacy. For many people, work no longer ends at the office door, it continues on the train home or after picking up the kids from school.

“That flexibility has to work both ways. It isn’t surprising to see people catering to their own personal needs in office hours, but security solutions need to evolve to reflect that change of behaviour. Malicious content is getting more advanced and harder to spot – we only need to look at recent malware targeting the NHS or Yahoo! for proof of that. With WorkSafe we’re committed to helping bosses ensure they have the right systems in place to stop threats at the network perimeter, instead of allowing them in and relying purely on desktop software protection.”

About the firm

WorkSafe is a network-level security solution, which comes as standard as part of TalkTalk Business’ Broadband packages.

Related News

  • Case Studies

    EEMA sponsor

    by Mark Rowe

    EEMA, the European association for e-Identity (eID) and security, is sponsoring the Small to Medium Security Installer of the Year and the…

  • Case Studies

    Rough sleeping powers

    by Mark Rowe

    Rough sleeping is often associated with nuisance activities such as begging, street drinking and anti-social behaviour. Homelessness is a complex issue and…

Newsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to stay on top of security news and events.

© 2024 Professional Security Magazine. All rights reserved.

Website by MSEC Marketing