A newly-released survey of industry professionals about the state’s digital security landscape found that while the Sunshine State lags other states in overall cybersecurity preparedness, it’s slowly improving as well as excelling when it comes to educational programs.
"We believe there is a much-needed shift taking place with organizations that traditionally may have been reactive when it comes to cybersecurity now becoming proactive," Sri Sridharan, director of the Florida Center for Cybersecurity, said in a release.
The survey, conducted by the Florida Center for Cybersecurity and Gartner Inc. in early last year, polled 380 security professionals in Florida about their companies’ security in 2016. It found that companies in Florida are reporting data breaches at higher rates than previous years. Breach reports jumped about 18 percent from 67 in 2015 to 77 in 2016.
Among the most severe breaches in the state was a University of Central Florida incident. Someone accessed the social security numbers and names of 63,000 current and previous students in early 2016.
Here are some of the report’s takeaways:
- Florida companies are behind in cybersecurity preparedness "due to a period of insufficient investment in security capabilities and resources," the report said. "Continued cybersecurity investment will be needed to remain in alignment and keep pace with digital business and technological evolution."
- Most of the state’s data breaches in 2016 happened because of human error.
- Florida excels in its applied research for cybersecurity.
- Florida ranks No. 3 in the nation for cyber crime incidents, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigations.
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