One in five businesses has experienced an APT attack, yet 62% of enterprises are not increasing security training in 2014
ME NewsWire/ Business Wire
ROLLING MEADOWS, Ill. - Monday, April 28th 2014
One
in five IT security professionals say their enterprises have been the
target of an advanced persistent threat (APT) yet 62 percent of
organizations have not increased security training in 2014, according to
the ISACA 2014 APT Survey. A separate study by Cisco estimates that
close to 1,000,000 positions for security professionals remain
unfilled.1 These indicators of a massive talent shortage are compounded
by a skills gap, with few cybersecurity programs emphasizing expertise
in business strategy and communication, in addition to technology. To
help address this growing worldwide skills crisis, global IT association
ISACA today launched the Cybersecurity Nexus (CSX) program at its North
America CACS conference.
CSX, developed in collaboration with
chief information security officers and cybersecurity experts from
leading companies around the world, fills an unmet need for a single,
central location where security professionals and their enterprises can
find cybersecurity research, guidance, certificates and certifications,
education, mentoring and community. All CSX materials are designed to
provide security-related information within the larger business context.
“Unless
the industry moves now to address the cybersecurity skills crisis,
threats like major retail data breaches and the Heartbleed bug will
continue to outpace the ability of organizations to defend against
them,” said Robert Stroud, ISACA international president-elect and vice
president of strategy and innovation for IT Business Management at CA
Technologies. “ISACA is proud to help close this gap with a
comprehensive program that provides expert-level cybersecurity resources
tailored to each stage in a cybersecurity professional’s career.”
The
continued growth of cyberattacks comes with a steep price tag. A World
Economic Forum/McKinsey report estimates that not changing current
approaches to cybersecurity could cost the global economy US $3
trillion.2
CSX, located at www.isaca.org/cyber, includes career
development resources, frameworks, community and research guidance such
as Responding to Targeted Cyberattacks and Transforming Cybersecurity
Using COBIT 5.
The CSX program reflects ISACA’s ongoing
collaboration with other global organizations at the center of
cybersecurity, such as NIST (U.S. National Institute of Standards and
Technology) and ENISA (European Union Agency for Network and Information
Security). ISACA will also host the World Finals of the EC-Council-run
CyberLympics ethical hacking competition at its upcoming
EuroCACS/Information Security and Risk Management Conference in
Barcelona.
Next Generation of Cyber Defenders
The CSX
program marks the first time in its 45-year history that ISACA will
offer a security-related certificate. The association’s four
certifications—including the Certified Information Security Manager
(CISM) credential—require both an exam and proof of work experience.
Ideal for recent university graduates and IT professionals seeking to
change fields, the Cybersecurity Fundamentals Certificate requires
applicants to pass a knowledge-based exam that provides objective proof
of subject mastery to potential employers.
Student interest in
cybersecurity careers is strong. A recent global poll of members of
ISACA student chapters shows that 88 percent of the ISACA student
members surveyed say they plan to work in a position that requires some
level of cybersecurity knowledge. However, fewer than half say they will
have the adequate skills and knowledge they need to do the job when
they graduate.
“Security is always one of the top three items on a
CIO’s mind, yet IT and computer science programs at the university
level are not allocating a proportional amount of training to
cybersecurity,” said Eddie Schwartz, vice president of global
cybersecurity and consulting solutions at Verizon Enterprise Solutions
and chair of ISACA’s Cybersecurity Task Force. “Today, there is a
sizeable gap between formal education and real world needs. This, in
itself, is an area requiring immediate focus so that the industry can
get better at detecting and mitigating cyberthreats.”
“Enterprises
cannot rely on just a handful of universities to teach cybersecurity.
With every employee and endpoint at risk of being exploited by cyber
criminals, security is everyone’s business. We need to make
cybersecurity education as accessible as possible to the next generation
of defenders,” noted ISACA International President Tony Hayes.
Upcoming
elements in the Cybersecurity Nexus program include a mentoring
program, a practitioner-level cybersecurity certification, SCADA
guidance, training courses, implementation guidance related to the US
Cybersecurity Framework developed by NIST and teaching materials for
professors.
About ISACA
With 115,000 constituents in 180
countries, ISACA® (www.isaca.org) helps business and IT leaders build
trust in, and value from, information and information systems.
Established in 1969, ISACA is the trusted source of knowledge,
standards, networking, and career development for information systems
audit, assurance, security, risk, privacy and governance professionals.
ISACA offers the Cybersecurity Nexus™, a comprehensive set of resources
for cybersecurity professionals, and COBIT®, a business framework that
helps enterprises govern and manage their information and technology.
ISACA also advances and validates business-critical skills and knowledge
through the globally respected Certified Information Systems Auditor®
(CISA®), Certified Information Security Manager® (CISM®), Certified in
the Governance of Enterprise IT® (CGEIT®) and Certified in Risk and
Information Systems Control™ (CRISC™) credentials. The association has
more than 200 chapters worldwide.
Follow ISACA on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ISACANews
1 Cisco 2014 Annual Security Report
2
Risk and responsibility in a hyperconnected world: Implications for
enterprises, The World Economic Forum and McKinsey & Company
Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=50850558&lang=en
Contacts
ISACA
Joanne Duffer, +1.847.660.5564
Kristen Kessinger, +1.847.660.5512
Rachel Acevedo, +1.847.660.5617
news@isaca.org
Permalink: http://www.me-newswire.net/news/10814/en
No comments:
Post a Comment