Law firms store some of the most sensitive information available regarding material business transactions, intellectual property, Personally Identifiable Information (PII) and other personal data. Because of the importance of their role in protecting data, the International Legal Technology Association (ILTA) and Conversant Group, an innovative provider of "Secure First" infrastructure and cybersecurity services, today announced the release of a joint cybersecurity research report titled “Security at Issue: State of Cybersecurity in Law Firms.”
The report presents findings of ILTA’s first industry-wide benchmarking survey on cybersecurity practices in global law firms, conducted in collaboration with Conversant Group, providing a rare glimpse into the vertical sector’s security practices. The survey was targeted specifically at understanding law firms’ cybersecurity controls, tools, practices and assumptions to determine how their cyber defenses could be improved.
"Because law firms are a top target of global threat actors and tactics like ransomware, ILTA recognized the need for a more in-depth, focused cybersecurity benchmarking survey beyond the ILTA technology-focused survey already being issued annually,” said Mark Grazman, Conversant president and ILTA Technology Survey volunteer member. “This focused survey goes much deeper into law firms’ security practices and posture, and it will enhance the industry-wide conversation about improving law firm cybersecurity and resilience given their high level of targeting and risk.”
According to the American Bar Association, nearly a third of law firms surveyed reported a breach within 2021, and 36% reported past malware infections. While law firms are in the crosshairs of threat actors, Conversant and ILTA’s data shows only ~15% of law firms felt they had security gaps (while over double that number have endured some form of breach).
“The data shows that legal IT staff suffer from both a definitional and paradigm problem,” said John A. Smith, CEO of Conversant Group. “IT leaders understand terms, definitions, and concepts differently, and while no survey instrument can fully capture those nuances, the data shows that there are gaps in understanding what it means to be secure.” Examples of this are shown in the survey data below.
“The key results we see from this survey show clearly that, without policy and procedure, firms are making security optional, left in the hands of users that are not technologically competent or trained enough to know how to be safe in a world that is both ever-changing and harder to innovate in without risk,” said Beth Anne Stuebe, Director of Publications and Press, ILTA.
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