When was the last time you performed a risk assessment of your computer network? Or evaluated the security of your personal, networked devices? An analysis of more than 212,000 Cisco networking devices at 350 organizations across North America found that 73 percent of businesses have end-of-life devices (those no longer being sold or supported) operating in their networks, up from 60 percent in 2015 — an increase of 13 percent. And total end-of-life devices increased to 6 percent in 2016 from 4 percent in 2015, according to the analysis, done by Chicago-based company Softchoice.
Computer Networks at Risk – Statistics on Corporate Network Vulnerability
The facts and stats on just how vulnerable corporate networks are due to end-of-life devices should motivate executives and IT departments to take action to get their networking house in order. Here are some additional statistics on corporate network vulnerability:
- 96 percent of businesses have end-of-sale devices (those no longer sold by the manufacturer, but still supported).
- 20 percent of all scanned network devices lack Cisco Smart Net Total Care support service.
- 23 percent of all devices assessed by Softchoice are end-of-sale (down 28 percent from 2015).
Inviting Security Breach: A Dangerous Trend
The implications of the Softchoice report show evidence of a dangerous trend: Too many at-risk, unsupported devices are being used on far too many corporate networks. This invites security breaches which could result in significant data loss and subsequent liabilities, fines, lawsuits, not to mention data exploitation by numerous black hat parties out to take advantage of any vulnerabilities in computing networks.
“We found the overall number of at-risk network devices is on the decline; however, the number of businesses who have them in their networks is actually on the rise,” said David Vigna, Cisco practice director at Softchoice, commenting on the matter. “The misconception is that fewer at-risk devices make an organization less vulnerable, but it only takes one to bring down an entire network.”
The recommendation from Softchoice is that businesses perform a comprehensive analysis of their IT infrastructure to determine which devices are protected and which ones need to be replaced, or will soon need replacing. Evaluate, also, your data loss and disaster recovery plan, and prepare for replacement devices as a forward move to optimize your network through new device rollouts.
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