Tag: Office 365

26 May 2022
Community Banks Use CloudInsight M365 Security Basics to Increase Security

Community Banks Use CloudInsight™ M365 Security Basics to Increase Security

Community Banks Use CloudInsight M365 Security Basics to Increase Security

To meet the challenges of escalating cyber threats and constantly evolving technology, organizations must have appropriate security measures in place to protect their network, data, and other assets. Financial institutions that use Microsoft Azure Directory and M365 can capitalize on CloudInsight™ M365 Security Basics to ensure they have the right security, identity, and compliance settings to keep their information safe in the Cloud. The product fills a critical need because Microsoft is always enabling and disabling features in Azure AD and M365, which can make it difficult for institutions to maintain the best security settings.

M365 Security Basics increases the visibility of potential security risks through three main services:

  • Reporting — The delivery of user-friendly Microsoft data
  • Alerting — Notifications of common indicators of compromise
  • Quarterly Reviews — Expert analysis and consultations

Here are two case study summaries to show how different institutions are using CloudInsight M365 Security Basics to gain better visibility into their cloud security and Microsoft settings:

Affinity Bank

Atlanta-based Affinity Bank wanted to get a better handle on potential security threats—particularly those relating to email. It implemented CloudInsight M365 Security Basics to prevent compromised user accounts, unknown users and forwarders, unapproved email access, and other risks. “Being able to receive alerts when attempted logins from outside of the country come through is a big reason why we were interested in the product,” said Senior Vice President and Chief Operations Robert Vickers. Just having the ability to put in preventative features blocking employees from sending or setting up a forward to an external email address was another plus for Affinity Bank. With almost $800 million in assets, three locations across Georgia, and a long-term relationship with Safe Systems, Affinity Bank anticipates significant improvement in its cloud security and overall security posture thanks to M365 Security Basics’ monitoring, alerting, and other tools. Aside from the tools that M365 Security Basics provides for Affinity Bank, the real advantage given to the bank is the relationship with Safe Systems. “The team at Safe Systems has been able to provide us with great expertise on exactly where we need to go, what we need to do, and best practices to get us there,” said Vickers. “Almost immediately after we signed on for CloudInsight, they gave us recommendations we could implement straight away.” Read more.

Franklin Bank & Trust Company

Since its inception in 1958, Franklin Bank & Trust Company has prioritized adapting to constant changes in technology to maintain its security. M365 Security Basics proved to be the ideal solution for the Franklin, Kentucky-based community bank, which has $700 million in assets and five branches across the state. Since implementing CloudInsight M365 Security Basics, the bank achieved improved efficiencies in its cloud security and settings. After the initial meeting with the new service, reports came back with deficiencies that the bank didn’t even know it had and that could expose them to potential data breaches and threats. They were able to tighten up privacy settings, including the bank’s Microsoft OneDrive, and impose conditional access policies to ensure data was protected. “Adding CloudInsight M365 Security Basics to our roster has really shone a light on our whole Microsoft cloud footprint. It has shown us which areas we need to shore up and, in turn, has made our bank more efficient and secure,” said IT Project Manager Aaron Miller. Read more.

Learn More

CloudInsight M365 Security Basics is a flexible, cost-effective solution that institutions can incorporate based on their specific priorities and requirements. While Affinity Bank used M365 Security Basics to primarily address email management, Franklin Bank & Trust Company wanted to gain better overall visibility into Microsoft security settings. In both cases, M365 Security Basics fit the bill. Depending on their license, financial institutions can use M365 Security Basics to customize a wide array of security settings in Azure AD, M365, and Exchange Online. This includes OneDrive and SharePoint Sharing; Teams and External Collaboration; and the Protection, Security, Compliance, and M365 Admin centers. Institutions can further enhance cloud security by adjusting the settings associated with Azure AD Premium P1, Intune, and Azure Information Protection. They can also apply conditional access policies, password protection, and a myriad of other security features.

For more information about how your institution can optimize Microsoft security settings to improve cloud security, download our white paper on “Azure and M365 Security Basics.”

22 Apr 2022
More Microsoft Azure and 365 Security Basics

More Microsoft Azure and 365 Security Basics

More Microsoft Azure and 365 Security Basics

Banks and credit unions today face an ever-increasing number of cloud security hazards. Here’s the good news: Financial institutions that use Microsoft Active Directory (Azure AD) and Microsoft 365 can lower their risk by modifying their security settings for these services. Not only can this help the financial institution minimize threats, but it can allow them to customize the features of Azure AD and Microsoft 365 (previously called Office 365) to their specific preferences and requirements.

Organizations are responsible for managing Azure AD and its security settings because when they purchased M365 licenses, they established a Microsoft tenant with Azure AD. From a compliance perspective, adjusting Azure AD’s settings is crucial since Microsoft automatically enables certain features that may violate or conflict with compliance policies for organizations in regulated industries.

Optimizing /M365 and Exchange Online Settings

Depending on your institution’s licenses, there is a wide range of security and compliance settings you can customize in Azure AD, M365, and Exchange Online such as:

  • OneDrive and SharePoint Sharing: Review the default level of sharing to control the flow of data based on what is appropriate for your institution.
  • Teams and External Collaboration: Review the platform’s default security and compliance settings, and if they are not sufficient, you can block all external domains to keep users from communicating externally.
  • Exchange Online: Control access, how emails are transmitted, the types of messages users can send to recipients in external domains, and the devices or apps that can connect.
  • Protection Center: Use the Basic Mobility and Security feature to manage and secure the mobile devices that are connected to your Microsoft 365 organization.
  • Security Center: Optimize email management by employing anti-spam policies for inbound emails, blocking automatic forwarding of outbound emails, using phishing simulations, quarantining potentially harmful messages, and blocking messages from fake senders.
  • Compliance Center: Implement a retention policy to manage the data by proactively choosing how to retain or delete content.
  • M365 Admin Center: Use modern authentication‎ in ‎Exchange Online‎ to enhance your institution’s security with features like conditional access and multifactor authentication. (Microsoft‎ strongly recommends turning off basic authentication for your organization.)

More Ways to Boost Security

You can further enhance cloud security by modifying the settings related to Azure AD Premium P1, Intune, and Azure Information Protection (AIP) licenses. With Azure AD Premium P1, for instance, you can include your institution’s logo, color scheme, and other branding elements on your Azure AD sign-in pages. You can also employ the hybrid Azure AD joined devices, conditional access policies, and password protection features. Microsoft Intune integration lets you configure policies to control how your institution’s devices and applications are used, including smartphones, tablets, and laptops. And AIP allows you to use deep content analysis to minimize data loss and enhance the labeling capabilities of Microsoft 365 to protect documents and emails.

M365 Security Basics Can Help

There are countless security settings that can be adjusted in Azure AD and /M365, and Microsoft is always introducing new features. This can make it difficult for institutions to ensure they have the most appropriate security, identity, and compliance settings—but our CloudInsight™ M365 Security Basics solution can make the process easier. M365 Security Basics is a collection of services designed to give community banks and credit unions a cost-effective way to manage their M365 settings. It offers reporting, the delivery of Microsoft data in a user-friendly format; alerting, notifications of the most common indicators of compromise; and quarterly reviews, expert analysis of M365 Security Basics reports, and explanations of the risk visible on the report and ways those risks may be mitigated.

To learn more about how to customize your institution’s Azure AD and M365 settings to bolster cloud security, access our “Microsoft Azure and M365 Security Basics” white paper.

17 Feb 2022
Microsoft Azure and 365 Security Basics Featured Blog Image_Featured Image

Microsoft Azure and 365 Security Basics

Microsoft Azure and 365 Security Basics Featured Blog Image_Featured Image

Financial Institutions that employ Microsoft 365 (also known as M365 and formerly branded as Office 365) are in the Cloud, and therefore, face a growing number of cyber threats. Consider this: The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) has seen a 400-percent increase in cybersecurity complaints since the pandemic started.

The surge in cybercrimes means financial institutions that use M365 need to focus on protecting their assets in the Cloud. Our CloudInsight™ M365 Security Basics makes it easy and affordable for institutions to start the process. M365 Security Basics provides visibility into security settings for Microsoft Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) and M365. Banks and credit unions can leverage this multi-faceted solution to get ahead of cyber threats and enhance cloud security.

Importance of Customizing Your Azure AD and M365 Settings

Your financial institution likely has a Microsoft tenant with Azure AD, whether you realize it or not. This is partly because every exchange online and M365 implementation requires the creation of a Microsoft tenant and Azure AD, even if the services are managed through a third party. There are also many other scenarios requiring the creation a Microsoft tenant, making it rare for most institutions not to have one.

It is important to understand whether you have a Microsoft tenant with Azure AD because the tenant belongs to your institution—not the licensing reseller—it is your obligation to know how to manage the security settings in these systems, including Azure AD, M365, and Exchange Online. This can be challenging because Microsoft’s default settings might conflict with your institution’s security and compliance requirements. Therefore, you must customize these settings to create more sophisticated and appropriate security, identity, and compliance policies for your institution. This should entail building policies around what users are allowed to do, what your institution’s risk assessment defines, what your institution’s compliance policies dictate, and what users will tolerate.

Once your institution has sufficient policies in place, it is essential to monitor for exceptions with reporting and alerting. And with the proper license, you can further enhance cloud security by optimizing the settings for Azure AD Premium P1, Intune, and Azure Information Protection.

How M365 Security Basics Can Help

Microsoft is constantly adjusting its platforms and automatically enabling new features to adapt to an ever-evolving security environment, making it difficult for banks and credit unions to keep up. Partnering with a value-added technology expert like Safe Systems can help you better manage your M365 tenant. Our M365 Security Basics service identifies cloud security blind spots and common risks such as compromised user accounts, enabled insecure protocols, and targeted phishing or SPAM attacks.

M365 Security Basics key services:

  • Reporting – Collects Microsoft data that may not be readily available to institutions and assembles it in a user-friendly format
  • Alerting – Delivers notifications for the most common indicators of compromise in Microsoft M365 tenants
  • Quarterly reviews – Provide a vital, objective look at M365 Security Basics reports to help institutions determine the optimal security settings for their requirements

The Importance of MFA

An invaluable security control financial institutions should also consider implementing is multi-factor authentication (MFA). MFA applies a combination of factors to validate people’s identity before giving them access to sensitive data, account information, and other assets. MFA offers effective, low-cost protection against cyberattacks and other threats; and not implementing this security feature in Azure AD is risky. According to Microsoft, 99.9 percent of account compromises can be blocked with MFA, but the overall MFA adoption rate we have seen in the financial industry is only around 46 percent.

The bottom line: Microsoft is constantly enabling and disabling features in Azure AD and M365—, therefore, financial institutions must be able to manage the complexities of optimizing their security, identity, and compliance settings. To learn more about how your institution can customize Azure AD and M365 settings to enhance cloud security, read our “Azure and M365 Security Basics” white paper.

28 Dec 2021
Cybersecurity Insurance and Multi-Factor Authentication

Cybersecurity Insurance and Multi-Factor Authentication

Cybersecurity Insurance and Multi-Factor Authentication

Financial institutions are increasingly embracing cybersecurity insurance as an important aspect of their information security program. Cyber insurance can offer vital coverage to protect businesses from various technology-related risks. Data breach insurance, for example, helps companies respond if personally identifiable information gets lost or stolen from their computers—whether intentionally by a hacker or accidentally by an employee. Cyber liability insurance offers expanded protection to help businesses prepare for, respond to, and recover from cyberattacks.

As cybercrimes continue to intensify, more cybersecurity insurance companies are calling for organizations to employ multi-factor authentication (MFA). Some carriers are even refusing to provide insurance quotes to companies that are not using this authentication method. From their perspective, MFA adoption makes perfect sense; it keeps unauthorized individuals from accessing sensitive information, reducing ransomware, data breaches, and other cyberattacks. This, in turn, minimizes insurance claims and saves carriers money.

For insurance providers, MFA is appealing because it lowers cyber risk by requiring users to verify who they are. The individual must furnish valid identification data followed by at least one other credential: a password, one-time passcode, or physical characteristics like their fingerprint or face. This strict authentication system allows organizations to certify people’s identity—before granting them access to sensitive information, an account, or other assets—and this can significantly strengthen their security.

While MFA is heavily promoted by many cyber insurance companies, an institution’s regulators may not require financial institutions to use multi-factor authentication. However, implementing MFA for a whole internal network may not be a simple task. Depending on the solution, it may require installing agent software to all the endpoints requiring MFA and configuring appropriate “break-glass” accounts for emergency use, which creates more infrastructure to be monitored and managed.

MFA Implementation Tips

To simplify MFA implementation, Banks and credit unions can apply a sequenced strategy instead of jumping straight to the internal network. As a first step, institutions can ensure MFA is turned on for all remote-access users, including creating endpoint control policies for their devices. The next logical step would be to lock down MFA for cloud applications. This includes Microsoft Online services like M365 (formerly Office 365) and Azure Active Directory (Azure AD). These solutions come with a variety of free security features that organizations can customize to their business requirements. Even at low licensing levels, these products allow MFA to be turned on for all users—which can be highly effective for averting business email compromise and ransomware attacks. But institutions will need higher-level licensing if they want to make conditional access policies based on the specific location, identity, or device of users. Azure AD Premium P1 and M365 Enterprise E3, for example, have a variety of advanced features that allow conditional access policies to be established to enhance security.

MFA is just one layer of security for banks and credit unions to consider. We hope this post provided some insight into applying MFA for both security and insurance purposes. To learn more about this topic and other security layers, listen to our recent “Ransomware, Cybersecurity, and MFA” webinar, hosted by our Chief Technology Officer, Brendan McGowan.

06 Dec 2021
How Layered Security Can Address Growing Cyberthreats

How Layered Security Can Address Growing Cyberthreats

How Layered Security Can Address Growing Cyberthreats

With the increasing complexity of cyberattacks, financial institutions need to implement more effective—and comprehensive—security measures. They need a variety of elements to create a layered approach to secure their data, infrastructure, and other resources from potential cyberthreats.

Many organizations rely on a castle-and-moat network security model where everyone inside the network is trusted by default. (Think of the network as the castle and the network perimeter as the moat.) No one outside the network is able to access data on the inside, but everyone inside the network can. However, security gaps may still exist in this model and others. The best approach to compensate for gaps is to surround the network with layers of security.

The basic “table stakes” for a layered security approach include a perimeter firewall with content filtering, email threat filters, an endpoint malware solution, and a robust patch management process. Banks and credit unions could also invest in additional and more sophisticated layers but each one will have associated acquisition and management costs, along with ongoing maintenance. So, it’s prudent for institutions to invest only in the number of layers/solutions they can competently manage.

Key Concerns

Today the top IT security concern for many organizations is ransomware. Due to the proactive measures many financial institutions have taken, the banking industry has fewer security breaches than health care and some other industries thus far. However, when a breach does happen to a financial institution, the impact is more costly than breaches occurring in other industries.

Four-Layer Security Formula

With these concerns in mind, here’s a four-layer “recipe” organizations can employ to improve their security posture:

  • Training and Testing: Using email phishing tests can serve as a good foundation for minimizing BEC and other social engineering threats.
  • Network Design: Institutions should refresh older networks to segment their components into different zones. It’s no longer sufficient to have servers, workstations, and printers sitting in one IP space together.
  • Domain Name System (DNS) filtering: DNS filtering prevents potentially damaging traffic from ever reaching the network. Because it proactively blocks threats, this makes it one of the most effective and affordable security layers institutions can apply.
  • Endpoint Protection: Institutions should have this type of protection on each of their endpoints, and the best endpoint protection tools have built-in ransomware solutions.

Other Important Considerations

It’s important to back up data regularly and ensure that those backups are well beyond the reach of ransomware and other threats. (Backups done to a local server that’s on-site and are still on the network may be susceptible to ransomware.) One way to address this issue is to have immutable backups, which are backup files that can’t be altered in any way and can deploy to production servers immediately in case of ransomware attacks or other data loss. Another option is to send backups to a cloud solution like Microsoft Azure Storage, which is affordable and easy to integrate because there are no servers to manage.

Another crucial element in security is Transport Layer Security/Secure Sockets Layer (TLS/SSL) encryption protocol, which can be somewhat of a double-edged sword. About 80 percent of website traffic is encrypted to protect it from unauthorized users during transmission. Traditional firewalls don’t have the ability to scrutinize traffic against a content filtering engine, which means savvy hackers can hide ransomware and other dangerous content inside. But firewalls with advanced features are capable of TLS/SSL inspection; they can decrypt content, analyze it for threats, and then re-encrypt the traffic before entering or leaving the network.

There’s an array of security solutions that institutions can implement to establish layered protection against cyber threats. For more insights about this topic, listen to our webinar on “Cyber Threats, Why You Need a Layered Approach.”

26 Oct 2021
Glennville Bank Strengthens Security Posture with CloudInsight™ M365 Security Basics

Glennville Bank Strengthens Security Posture with CloudInsight™ M365 Security Basics

Glennville Bank Strengthens Security Posture with CloudInsight™ M365 Security Basics

Our CloudInsight™ M365 Security Basics solution is helping community financial institutions increase their security posture. Take Glennville Bank, for example. The Georgia community bank, which has $312 million in assets, seven locations, and 66 employees, jumped at the chance to capitalize on the service to identify and secure threats to its Microsoft 365 settings. M365 Security Basics provided the bank with greater visibility into cloud security settings for Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) and M365 tenants through reports and alerts.

Like most financial institutions, Glennville Bank leverages technology to better serve its customers and maintain its operations. Also, like other institutions, the bank has a variety of Microsoft licenses, and managing the security settings for these products became difficult and time-consuming, particularly for Glennville Bank’s network administrator, Zach Horn, who describes his proficiency with Microsoft as “fairly limited.”

“Given the complexity of our cloud tenant settings, I’m not comfortable enough with Microsoft or their updates to manage every setting correctly,” Horn explained. “With all the potential security risks out there, I knew I needed reports that could help me identify risky security settings, monitor identity controls, and ensure our configuration matches our information security policy.”

With M365 Security Basics, Glennville Bank was able to set data trends and identify several settings that needed addressing, such as creating a baseline for failed logins. The bank also discovered that its user access details were often inconsistent, and through the M365 Security Basics service they received easy-to-follow instructions for correcting the problem. “Safe Systems did a great job fine-tuning the product to the demographic we needed,” Horn said. “Their knowledge has been helpful in pointing me in the right direction in knowing which Microsoft licenses I need to go to in the future.”

Product Highlights

M365 Security Basics is the first offering in Safe Systems’ CloudInsight™ family of products. It’s specifically designed for community banks and credit unions that have Microsoft 365 products (Exchange Online, SharePoint, or OneDrive), use Azure AD, and store non-public information in the cloud. M365 Security Basics’ reporting, alerts, and quarterly reviews are customized to help financial institutions improve their cloud security awareness by identifying potential risks and common signs of compromise. The product is developed by engineers who hold dozens of certifications, including the Microsoft 365 Certified: Security Administrator Associate certification. M365 Security Basics makes it easier for institutions to monitor their configurations for current and new features that are automatically enabled by major cloud providers like Microsoft Azure.

The powerful reporting from M365 Security Basics enables financial institutions to review vital Microsoft cloud tenant settings. This allows them to recognize unsafe security settings, examine identity controls, make sure their configuration is consistent with their information security policy, and demonstrate this to examiners and stakeholders. Reports are available as “Summary” versions (with brief information, such as the Tenant Summary and User Summary) and “Details” versions with more in-depth data. (Glennville Bank uses the Tenant Summary to highlight important issues during IT steering committee meetings.)

M365 Security Basics also offers alerts and quarterly reviews as add-on services. Alerts provide notifications about the most common indicators of compromise (like unauthorized access) and are grouped under Azure AD Roles, Azure AD Sign Ins, OneDrive, SharePoint, and Exchange Online. The quarterly reviews give institutions a periodic, objective analysis of their recent M365 Security Basics reporting, so they can gain a better understanding of their Microsoft 365 tenant security.

CloudInsight™ M365 Security Basics not only helps financial institutions like Glennville Bank secure their information but also makes it easier to compile data required for examiners. Read the complete Glennville case study to see how your organization can benefit from M365 Security Basics.

13 Oct 2021
Stories from the Front Lines

Stories from the Front Lines: How Real Financial Institutions Handled an O365/M365 Cloud Security Compromise

Stories from the Front Lines

Microsoft 365 (formerly Office 365) comes with an array of settings that customers can modify to enhance their security controls. When these settings are not effectively adjusted though, serious cloud security compromises can ensue. Our M365 Security Basics solution helps financial institutions detect and respond to potential problems. From our recent webinar, here are real-life stories about financial institutions (whose names have been changed) that had their cloud security compromised. See how they handled each situation, so you can learn what to do and not do to secure your O365/M365 account.

Loan Officer – Email Forwarding

Luke, a loan officer, is constantly emailing people inside and outside his organization. He often sends sensitive information but uses encryption to protect his outbound emails and multi-factor authentication (MFA) to protect his identity. Somehow his email account was compromised—for eight whole months—before the problem was discovered. Our M365 Security Basics reporting indicated there was an issue with his email being forwarded to an external domain. We worked with the IT administration team to confirm that a suspicious Yahoo address was not an authorized send-to address for the emails Luke had been receiving. The intruders’ cunning scheme involved a modified mailbox setting that predated Luke’s MFA setup and the other precautions Luke had implemented. We were able to resolve the compromise by removing the forwarding property. Moving forward, Luke’s IT team needs to keep a close watch to ensure the organization’s email accounts are protected.

IT Administrator – Global Auditing

Han works at a smaller organization and wears multiple hats as an IT, compliance, and security administrator. While he’s not well versed in cloud security, Han thinks the cloud is the best option for his organization. He selects various Microsoft cloud resources and works with a vendor to establish a tenant in Azure Active Directory (Azure AD), which is a requirement for O365/M365. Han provisions his account administrative rights in Azure, synchronizes users and passwords, and gets help training end-users on Microsoft 365 services like OneDrive, SharePoint, and Teams. Then he notices an Azure AD account that he and his team have never seen—and the name of the account is strangely almost identical to an existing end-user. Han called our support staff for assistance and learned that his global administrator account had been compromised. To make matters worse, Han had left his security settings at defaults and had not enabled global auditing, which meant there was no way to determine what the attacker had changed in the system. The best solution was to move the organization’s data, email, and identities to a brand new Microsoft tenant. This extensive migration project could have likely been avoided if Han had enabled MFA and the proper audit settings.

HR – External Document Sharing

Human resources vice president Leah employs a variety of technologies to facilitate working from home and the office. Leah relies on the Cloud, and desktop and mobile apps to access documents on all her devices and enjoys using Teams to share files with others in her organization. Using these technology services has caused her to inadvertently place the company at risk of exposure and identity compromise because her IT administration team had not implemented the appropriate security controls for all their organization’s licensed technology services, creating a security gap. Luckily, the IT team received an M365 Security Basics alert for a file being shared externally in OneDrive, which is a common alert that we see. There was also enough data in the alert to indicate the multiple bad security, identity, and compliance practices that Leah has. The IT team resolved these issues by reducing the default sharing levels of SharePoint Online and OneDrive and retraining Leah on good and bad practices for security, identity, and compliance.

CEO – Multifactor Authentication

As the CEO of his organization, Chewy’s contact information is very public; his email address is prominently displayed on the company’s website, LinkedIn, and other social media platforms. Chewy uses multiple devices to get work done in the office and at home. He often signs into whatever computer is handy, whether it’s his or his wife’s laptop. Chewy’s account is under attack in Azure AD from a Russian IP. M365 Security Basics Alerting was able to notify his IT team of this by way of the Large Number of Failed Sign Ins for a Single User alert. Unfortunately, the IT department did not require MFA registration for most of the organization’s users, including Chewy, even after being alerted to the attack. The Russian attackers eventually compromised Chewy’s account. Once they did, our alerting engine promptly notified the IT team of a successful sign-in from outside of the USA, which they promptly responded to, limiting the amount of time the account was compromised.

Listen to the full stories or watch the complete webinar.

11 Oct 2021
What Financial Institutions Should Budget for in 2022

What Financial Institutions Should Budget for in 2022

What Financial Institutions Should Budget for in 2022

Many of us thought 2021 was going to be the downhill side of the pandemic. I recall working on a webinar presentation that we hosted last summer and including the words, “Now that the pandemic is behind us…” Obviously, I was overly optimistic. As we look ahead to 2022, we must acknowledge that the COVID-19 pandemic will continue to affect us to one degree or another. With that said, these budgeting ideas for 2022 may look somewhat similar to those for 2021, but there are slight variations based on current banking technology, compliance, and security issues.

1. Multifactor Authentication

Implement multifactor authentication (MFA) on all your email accounts wherever it is possible and appropriate. MFA can reduce the risk of having account credentials compromised by as much as 99.9%, making it one of the most effective measures you can use to protect your institution. There is typically a small cost for licensing and implementing MFA software. So, you can add MFA to your email accounts for a nominal cost and with minimal effort in most cases. If you are using Microsoft’s cloud email solution, for instance, implementing MFA can be as easy as changing a few minor settings. Another area to consider for MFA is logging into the domain account. There can be a cost associated with this as you will probably want to use a tool to help you manage the process. You can apply MFA only on accounts with administrator rights or on all users. But since many cybersecurity insurance companies are requiring MFA for accounts with administrator rights, using this stronger type of authentication might be your only option.

2. Laptops

With different variants of COVID-19 or other viruses popping up, remote work may still be an option for certain employees. Remote capabilities may even be necessary to keep the institution operating smoothly at times. Be sure you have the infrastructure in place for a partial remote workforce because the need could develop at any point. For this reason, you should consider providing laptops for all employees who could conceivably work from home. Start with those who need new devices. Then prioritize based on those doing the highest-level work necessary to keep the institution running. Laptops and encryption software, required for mobile devices, may cost slightly more but should not cause a huge increase in expenditures. In some cases, you may be able to reuse a desktop computer to replace an older workstation for an employee whose duties cannot be performed remotely.

And don’t forget… There is a chip shortage and high demand for laptops, which means it can take months to secure computers and other hardware. So, order any equipment you need well in advance to ensure you have the appropriate infrastructure in place to support staff that may need to work from home.

3. Moving to the Cloud

Having infrastructure in the cloud can be extremely beneficial, so slowly start moving your infrastructure to the cloud. Cloud infrastructure decreases the need for an employee to be onsite with the hardware, and cloud computing increases uptime. In addition, disaster recovery becomes easier and faster with cloud infrastructure. More than 90% of Fortune 500 companies are running at least some infrastructure in the cloud, primarily through Microsoft’s cloud computing platform: Azure. The cloud is the future of IT and infrastructure, and it makes sense for institutions that need reliable and resilient infrastructures. So, if you need to purchase a server next year, consider getting a quote for moving the server to the cloud instead.

4. Cloud Security

While the cloud offers plenty of advantages, it comes with settings, management tools, and security options that must be effectively configured and managed to ensure the highest level of security in the cloud. Cloud security is a concern for not only institutions with infrastructure in the cloud, but also for M365 Windows/Office licensees with OneDrive enabled, email in the cloud, or using Microsoft as an authentication mechanism with a third-party application. Earlier this year, the FDIC released a letter outlining the need to secure cloud configurations. Their cloud-security concerns are warranted. Safe Systems has worked with several institutions ranging from a hundred million in assets up to multibillion dollars in assets and found that almost every institution had gaps in their cloud security. Some institutions had indications of their email or user accounts being compromised; others had settings that could open the door to future compromises. Safe Systems worked closely with these institutions to develop an innovative M365 Security solution to address these issues with reports, alerts, and reviews. This unique product is specifically designed to help financial institutions manage their cloud setup now and in the future. In addition, it is a reasonably priced option for the substantial amount of value that it delivers. Institutions should reach out for a quote to determine if M365 Security could fit into their budget next year.

5. Virtual ISO

Another item to consider for your budget is virtual Information Security Officer or VISO services, which we also mentioned last year. These services have become increasingly popular as the landscape of information security has grown more extensive and complex. In many cases, institutions are finding it harder to keep up with the latest information security expectations, regulations, and trends. Safe Systems’ ISOversight service addresses this problem by combining applications for self-management with assistance from compliance experts to offer a VISO service at a competitive price. This type of service can be beneficial in many ways as it can provide structure, automation, accountability, assistance, and consistency throughout your information security program. It can also enable your institution to stay engaged, which is critical when an exam or audit occurs. VISO services, which vary in price depending on the work being performed by the third-party provider, are ideal for any institution with limited access to security expertise in-house.

6. Cybersecurity

You cannot have a conversation about budgets for next year without addressing the issue of cybersecurity. Consider this: Cyber-attacks are 300 times more likely to hit financial services firms than other companies, a recent Boston Consulting Group report indicates. Cyber-attacks continue to climb each year, with the global cybersecurity market expected to eclipse $300 billion by 2024, according to Global Insights. And cybersecurity has become even more precarious during the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic has created new opportunities for security breaches as the increase in remote work makes information security more challenging to manage. Unfortunately, institutions will need to increase their security layers and annual spending to address this issue. According to Computer Services Inc. (CSI), 59% of financial institutions will increase spending for cybersecurity this year.

In Conclusion

The threat to your institution’s data is as real today as it ever has been. Therefore, make sure you are applying these measures to strengthen your security:

  • Employee training to ensure adequate, effective, and safe practices
  • Perimeter protection to ensure the appropriate layers are enabled and all traffic is being handled correctly, including encrypted traffic
  • Advanced threat protection and logging to be able to identify how, if at all, malware or an intrusion created an incident
  • Backup and data redundancy to ensure ransomware cannot wipe out your data

Have a conversation with a security company you trust to ensure that, if you are the target of a ransomware attack, your business won’t sustain long-term damage. In other words, invest in cybersecurity now, so your institution won’t end up paying more later.

As you contemplate your budget for 2022, don’t just think about the items that others have put on your plate. Be sure to consider the changes that may have occurred at your institution—and the ones that may be coming—and have a plan to address these. All these changes can be exciting and make a major difference for your institution. But they can often be hard to get implemented if they are not budgeted for ahead of time.

14 Sep 2021
How Financial Institutions Can Better Manage Their Azure Active Directory Responsibilities

How Financial Institutions Can Better Manage Their Azure Active Directory Responsibilities

How Financial Institutions Can Better Manage Their Azure Active Directory Responsibilities

If your institution is using Microsoft 365 (formerly Office 365), you also have—and are responsible for—Azure Active Directory (Azure AD), Microsoft’s cloud-based identity and access management service. Microsoft Online business services like M365/O365, require Azure AD for sign-in and to help with identity protection. If you subscribe to Microsoft Online business services, you automatically get Azure AD with access to all the free features.

With an Azure AD tenant, you’re responsible for overseeing Azure AD’s security features, which can be customized to your business requirements. For instance, you can use Azure AD to require multi-factor authentication for users who are accessing important organizational resources. You can also employ Azure AD utilities to automate user provisioning between your existing Windows Server AD and cloud apps, including M365.

The Good News: You’ve Already Vetted Azure AD

If you’re daunted by the idea of overseeing Azure AD, don’t be. You’ve likely already vetted Azure AD for compliance because you’re using M365/O365. So, if you properly completed the vendor management process, Azure is already covered. In addition, Microsoft has taken steps to secure the environment that houses data in the Azure AD platform.

However, customers have the ability to choose settings that can make Azure AD more secure. Since M365/O365 is designed to be a collaborative environment, their out-of-the-box security settings are calibrated for sharing, requiring some modifications to enhance the security features. For example, you can use the Azure AD management interface to adjust the sharing dial to keep users from disclosing non-public or sensitive information.

Oversight Responsibilities

If you obtain an Azure AD license through a third party, you’re still responsible for managing, controlling, and monitoring access within your organization. This includes access to resources in Azure AD and other Microsoft Online services like Microsoft 365/Office 365. More importantly, your institution (not your vendor) is responsible for managing all the security features of Azure AD.

With an Azure AD tenant, you should:

  • Manage your cloud and on-premises apps
  • Manage your guest users and external partners, while maintaining control over your own corporate data
  • Customize and control how users sign up, sign in, and manage their profiles when using your apps
  • Manage how your cloud or on-premises devices access your corporate data
  • Manage your organization’s identity through employee, business partner, vendor, service, and app access controls
  • Detect potential vulnerabilities affecting your organization’s identities, configure policies to respond to suspicious actions, and then take appropriate action to resolve them
  • Gain insights into the security and usage patterns in your environment through reports and monitoring

Safe Systems can help financial institutions optimize key features in Azure AD and M365/O365 to meet or exceed their security objectives. Our M365 Security Basics solution can provide expertise and visibility into security settings through reporting, alerting, and quarterly reviews.