Technology & Innovation

Information risk

November 20, 2013

Global

November 20, 2013

Global
James Chambers

Former senior editor

James is Bureau Chief for Monocle, Hong Kong. Prior to this he worked as a Senior Editor with The EIU's Thought Leadership team for over three years researching business, technology and cities. He has also written about business and technology for The World In 2015 and economist.com. James has previous experience from IR magazine, a finance publication, where he was research editor in London and Shanghai. Additionally he contributed to Legal Week, a weekly legal magazine, and worked on the FT Innovative Lawyers Awards in the US and Europe. James is an English law-qualified solicitor (currently non-practising) and holds post-graduate legal qualifications from BPP Law School and an LLP in Law from the London School of Economics.

A programme of research, sponsored by HP, exploring how organisations view and manage information risk in the era of big and borderless information

Report Summary

Information risk: Managing digital assets in a new technology landscape is an Economist Intelligence Unit report, sponsored by HP. It is intended to explore how organisations view and approach information risk and its management in the era of “big data” and cloud computing.

The report is part of a global research programme dedicated to information risk. A range of multimedia content on the subject is available on a dedicated online hub -  - including articles, videos, and infographics.

Why read this report

  • Employees are the biggest risk to information but more than three-quarters (76%) of respondents believe information risk can largely be mitigated by technology
  • Increased collaboration with third parties and outsourcing are doing more to increase risks to information than cloud computing, big data or bring-your-own-device (BYOD)
  • Awareness of information risk does not extend across the business. Only one-in-four companies (27%) report an extensive awareness of information risk across the organisation
  • Placing a monetary value on information is a tricky but growing practice. Only one-in-ten companies have assigned a monetary amount to all types of information they hold, but the trend is moving in this direction
  • Different rules about personal data in different regions are problematic for companies. Over two-thirds (68%) of respondents would welcome greater regional harmonisation of the rules surrounding data security
  • Data breaches are now a fact of doing business. Nearly half (48%) of organisations experienced a loss of information in the past two years; the majority would not rule out doing business with another company suffering a breach

"We no longer control a network perimeter over which we can throw a safe blanket and say that everything within the network is now safe and contained. Steve Durbin, global vice president, Information Security Forum "

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