With traditional vulnerability points in an enterprise network becoming increasingly challenging to hack, the next wave of break-in attempts might stem via the most unexpected source. In fact, it’s already happening. The question is, are you guarded against it?
Nobody ever suspects the office printer. Fifty-six percent of enterprise companies leave printers out of their security strategy. Research conducted by the Ponemon Institute reported that 60 percent of companies surveyed had a data breach involving printers, requiring an average of 46 days to resolve a cyberattack. In another survey, 80 percent of companies indicated that IT security is important to business processes; but just 59 percent of those companies stated that print security was important to them.
Here are five ways print security risks can unleash some serious damage to your business
Compromised network
Even behind the firewall, many devices on a network may create a new access point to the entire network. When printers are overlooked in a comprehensive network security plan, that point of entry can be very welcoming to hackers, who can cause catastrophic consequences once inside the network.
When a hacker takes-over an unsecured printer
When hackers gain access to unsecured printers, they wield all the power for destruction. Your printer could become a possessed machine, printing random jobs, transmitting foreign faxes and changing all of its settings. Printers are also prime targets of denial-of-service (DoS) attacks.
Data breaches
Unencrypted print data is a hacker’s dream. If data transmitted to a printer is unencrypted, it shows up as clear, legible text. If hackers want access to this data, it can be captured and read using a standard PRN reader.
Unattended print jobs
Abandoned printouts can sit for days in the printer’s document tray or end up littering the copy room. Nosy employees can sneak off with confidential information inadvertently left behind. This information leak also makes a company liable for regulatory compliance failures.
Access to mobile devices complicates it further
As computing devices on the network expand to include mobile devices, it is more challenging to provide network authentication and secure access to printers. Even if the printer is on a secure network, the mobile device might be compromised, creating potential back-door opportunities for a hacker.
Imaging and printing vulnerability points
Getting started with print security: Protecting your business against such threats require a 360 approach towards security, ensuring there are no loop holes left open for a potential exploit. However, here are a few guidelines that can go a long way towards protecting you from vulnerabilities around print security.
Read more about HP’s secure printing solutions to find out how you can deploy the most adequate print security strategy for your office network.