Brianna White

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Staff member
Jul 30, 2019
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IoT devices have exploded over the last several years due to the increase in individuals working from home and the rapid move towards a more connected experience for many industries. IoT has enabled workers to perform tasks allowing them to work remotely, contributing to the need for more and more devices to operate while not on-premise, expanding the network. According to analysts at IDC, IoT spending in Europe is expected to reach $202 billion in 2021, and with the arrival of 5G, it will continue to experience double-digit growth through 2025. Despite this mass adoption, there is a clear downside: IoT devices are creating a new, broader attack surface, exposing end users and enterprises to unknown vulnerabilities in environments where connected devices are pervasive.
One of the biggest challenges today is that IoT devices are hard to monitor and secure. For example, cyber security solutions are sometimes far too complex for low-power sensors used on production lines, many of them use outdated software which lack encryption and some devices only connect sporadically. On top of this, unauthorized or third-party IoT devices open up additional attack vectors which organizations might not have visibility into. All of these elements make it a labor-intensive nightmare to discover, manage, and protect.
Continue reading: https://www.information-age.com/iot-vulnerabilities-should-be-wake-up-call-for-organisations-123497071/
 

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