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Sepio's message to the financial services sector is bolstered by an updated Congressional Research Service reportIn light of recent data breaches, updated whitepaper highlights the need for financial services companies to beef up their cybersecurity efforts to protect organizational operations and reputations and retain customers. In addition to highlighting that recent data breaches have increased concerns about the privacy and security of consumer financial information at major financial institutions, the report states that the per-company cost of cybercrime (over "As the Congressional Research Service report indicates, cybersecurity breaches in the financial industry are not only costly, but they pose both operational and reputational risks for organizations," said Bentsi Ben-Atar, CMO and co-founder of Sepio. "The breaches that befall these organizations can incapacitate a business and force customers to go elsewhere to ensure their proprietary data is protected. For organizations to keep operations running smoothly, their reputations intact and retain their customers, it is essential to prioritize asset visibility and risk management. By deploying Sepio's solution, these companies can see all assets in an organization, known and unknown, wherever they are, whoever installed them and however they are or are not being used." As network access controls (NACs) and passive network probing tools rely primarily on traffic monitoring, these cybersecurity solutions detect devices based on their activity rather than their existence. This presents an increasing challenge to organizations that have had to keep up with a growing number of assets and remote payment solutions from unknown devices since the pandemic. To eliminate the blind spots, Sepio's Asset Risk Management platform is based on physical layer data, which does not require traffic monitoring. The solution detects devices based on their existence, providing ultimate visibility so all known and unknown assets, active or not in use, can be seen. The report points out that "if the entire system fails to adequately address cybersecurity concerns, this could lead to systemic risk— the risk that a cybersecurity incident would destabilize the financial system. For example, in a highly interconnected financial system, a cybersecurity incident at one of the major banks or payment networks could adversely affect operations at many other financial institutions." "This is something we want to help financial institutions avoid," added Ben-Atar. "As the report highlights, ever since COVID, the reliance on remote devices and technologies has increased, and organizations must ensure that all their technologies are entirely secure. I always say that you cannot secure what you cannot see, which is why asset visibility for asset risk management is key to the financial services sector. Furthermore, due to how heavily regulated this industry is, any breach of policy can have serious ramifications and result in significant reputational damage due to highly publicized incidents." About Sepio Media Contact
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