Especially over the course of the past year, we have found out how important it is to maintain proper hygiene. However, this is also true not just for us human beings, but also for IT. Routine IT and cyber hygiene help protect against cyberattacks and keep systems operating properly. In this article, we tell you the difference between IT hygiene and cyber hygiene, as well as the tasks that you ought to be including in your hygiene routine.
It is probably clear to everyone by now how important hygiene is in protecting us from diseases like Covid-19. But what exactly do we mean by hygiene? Hygiene is the science of maintaining your health, but this does not just apply to us humans. Last year, once again, the incidence of cyberattacks increased markedly. Particularly in stressful times, not just during the pandemic, companies have to deal with a lot of things at the same time and often forget about the unremarkable routine tasks that keep performance going and protect against cyberattacks, so a "hygiene routine" needs to be put in place. High data volumes, complex, sometimes unclear infrastructures and inadequate levels of security awareness amongst staff – these are all factors that can give viruses a free rein. High degrees of complexity are the nemesis of good IT hygiene and make it difficult to keep track of all endpoints in wide-spread networks, so it may be high time to rethink your own hygiene strategy.
Having healthy IT is the foundation for effective cyber security. So what is the difference between IT hygiene and cyber hygiene? For people, washing their hands is what regular updates, cleaning the memory caches and defragmenting the hard disks are for computers. This keeps their data and the infrastructure "in good health". Systems need to function correctly and data integrity and high availability have to be safeguarded. Thus, maximum efficiency is guaranteed by maintaining systems properly and taking care of the infrastructure, which in turn reinforces the defensive wall against cyberattacks.
However, cyber hygiene is predominantly about the practices and precautions that keep sensitive data organised and protected against external cyberattacks, ransomware and data theft. At its core, cyber hygiene is no more than a security routine that is applied to as many security processes as possible.
Unfortunately, just washing your hands is not enough to protect yourself against viruses, and the same applies to IT systems. The following points should be included in your routine maintenance:
The importance of having comprehensive IT and cyber hygiene routines cannot be underestimated. When used in conjunction with robust, company-wide security practices, sound hygiene practices will help to maintain your organisation's security posture.
How good is your IT security? Is your hygiene routine really good enough? Why not use a penetration to test put your IT infrastructure, systems and organisation and find its hidden vulnerabilities? In this way, you can optimise your cyber security − and of course cyber hygiene − in a sustainable way.