Security

No wonder Brit universities report hacks so often: Half of staff have had zero infosec training, apparently

Plus: Don't worry, students. The attackers told us they destroyed your data


Nearly half of British university staff say they have received no cybersecurity training, according to a recent survey.

Most worryingly, 8 per cent of the 86 universities that answered pentesting biz Redscan's Freedom of Information questions said they had reported five or more breaches to the Information Commissioner's Office over the past 12 months.

The concerning results continued when further education institutions were asked to disclose how much security training their staff received. 46 per cent of staff received no training at all, while one Russell Group uni said that just 12 per cent of its staff had received "any" training in infosec matters.

Brit unis hit in Blackbaud hack inform students that their data was nicked, which has gone as well as you might expect

READ MORE

"The fact that such a large number of universities don't deliver cybersecurity training to staff and students, nor commission independent penetration testing, is concerning," said Redscan chief techie Mark Nicholls. "These are foundational elements of every security program and key to helping prevent data breaches."

Making up for the lack of widespread security training was the level of dedicated infosec staff employed by universities, which stood at a grand averaged total of three qualified people. Those three people were at least supported by the 51 per cent of universities that said they did provide some cybersecurity training to their students.

The news comes as universities continue mopping up from the Blackbaud supply chain attack, where a provider of cloud-based CRM systems used for alumni relations and fundraising suffered a ransomware attack. Blackbaud then paid off the criminals, notifying customers two months later.

'Blackbaud has stated this copy [of your data] was then destroyed'.... Well, if they say so!

Newcastle, De Montfort and Brunel Universities are the latest to tell students and alumni their data was handed to criminals. In an email seen by The Register, De Montfort warned its alumni: "Blackbaud has stated this copy [of your data] was then destroyed before it could be passed on further or misused, although this cannot be guaranteed."

Newcastle University said that "no direct action in relation to this incident is required at this stage".

Despite urgings from GCHQ and similar agencies to be on alert for cybersecurity threats, it appears universities are still largely fumbling in the dark. Last year the academic Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) said a pentesting exercise it ran resulted in a 100 per cent compromise rate.

"Even at this time of intense budgetary pressure, institutions need to ensure that their cybersecurity teams receive the support they need to defend against sophisticated adversaries. Breaches have the potential to seriously impact organisations' reputation and funding," concluded Redscan's Nicholls. ®

Send us news
32 Comments

185K people's sensitive data in the pits after ransomware raid on Cherry Health

Extent of information seized will be a concern for those affected

Over a million Neighbourhood Watch members exposed through web app bug

Unverified users could scoop up data on high-value individuals without any form of verification process

Lawsuit accuses Grindr of illegally sharing users' HIV status

LGBTQ+ dating app's maker previously denied selling sensitive user data

Cybercriminals threaten to leak all 5 million records from stolen database of high-risk individuals

It’s the second time the World-Check list has fallen into the wrong hands

US House approves FISA renewal – warrantless surveillance and all

PLUS: Chinese chipmaker Nexperia attacked; A Microsoft-signed backdoor; CISA starts scanning your malware; and more

Pandabuy confirms crooks nabbed data on 1.3M punters

Nothing says 'sorry' like 10 percent off shipping for a month

Global taxi software vendor exposes details of nearly 300K across UK and Ireland

High-profile individuals including MPs said to be caught up in leak

SharePoint logs are easily circumvented and Microsoft is dragging its heels

Now is the perfect time to review those permissions

Puppies, kittens, data at risk after 'cyber incident' at veterinary giant

IT systems pulled offline for chance to paws and reflect

Ransomware gang <em>did</em> steal residents' confidential data, UK city council admits

INC Ransom emerges as a growing threat as some ex-LockBit/ALPHV affiliates get new gigs

OWASP server blunder exposes decade of resumes

Irony alerts: Open Web Application Security Project Foundation suffers lapse

Nearly 3M people hit in Harvard Pilgrim healthcare data theft

Also, TheMoon botnet back for EoL SOHO routers, Sellafield to be prosecuted for 'infosec failures', plus critical vulns