HP Inc. (NYSE: HPQ) today released a new report highlighting the
far-reaching cybersecurity implications of failing to secure
devices at every stage of their lifecycle. The findings show that
platform security – securing the hardware and firmware of PCs,
laptops and printers – is often overlooked, weakening cybersecurity
posture for years to come.
The report, based on a global study of 800+ IT and security
decision-makers (ITSDMs) and 6000+ work-from-anywhere (WFA)
employees, shows that platform security is a growing concern with
81% of ITSDMs agreeing that hardware and firmware security must
become a priority to ensure attackers cannot exploit vulnerable
devices. However, 68% report that investment in hardware and
firmware security is often overlooked in the total cost of
ownership (TCO) for devices. This is leading to costly security
headaches, management overheads and inefficiencies further down the
line.
Key findings from across the five stages of the device lifecycle
include:
- Supplier Selection – In addition, 34% say a
PC, laptop or printer supplier has failed a cybersecurity audit in
the last five years, with 18% saying the failure was so serious
that they terminated their contract. 60% of ITSDMs say the lack of
IT and security involvement in device procurement puts the
organization at risk.
- Onboarding and Configuration – More than half
(53%) of ITSDMs say BIOS passwords are shared, used too broadly, or
are not strong enough. Moreover, 53% admit they rarely change BIOS
passwords over the lifetime of a device.
- Ongoing Management – Over 60% of ITSDMs do not
make firmware updates as soon as they're available for laptops or
printers. A further 57% of ITSDMs say they get FOMU (Fear Of Making
Updates) in relation to firmware. Yet 80% believe the rise of AI
means attackers will develop exploits faster, making it vital to
update quickly.
- Monitoring and Remediation – Every year, lost
and stolen devices cost organizations an estimated $8.6bni. One in
five WFA employees have lost a PC or had one stolen, taking an
average 25 hours before notifying IT.
- Second Life and Decommissioning – Nearly half
(47%) of ITSDMs say data security concerns are a major obstacle
when it comes to reusing, reselling, or recycling PCs or laptops,
while 39% say it’s a major obstacle for printers.
"Buying PCs, laptops or printers is a security decision with
long-term impact on an organization’s endpoint infrastructure. The
prioritization, or lack thereof, of hardware and firmware security
requirements during procurement can have ramifications across the
entire lifetime of a fleet of devices – from increased risk
exposure, to driving up costs or negative user experience – if
security and manageability requirements are set too low compared to
the available state of the art,” warns Boris Balacheff, Chief
Technologist for Security Research and Innovation at HP Inc.
Balacheff continues: "It’s essential that end-user device
infrastructures become resilient to cyber risks. This starts with
prioritizing the security of hardware and firmware and improving
the maturity of how they are managed across the entire lifecycle of
devices across the fleet.”
From factory to fingertips – oversights in the supplier
selection process, and onboarding and configuration limitations,
impact device security across the lifecycle
The findings highlight the growing need for IT and security to
be part of the procurement process for new devices, to set the
requirements and verify vendor security claims:
- 52% of ITSDMs say procurement teams rarely collaborate with IT
and security to verify suppliers’ hardware and firmware security
claims.
- 45% of ITSDMs admit they have to trust suppliers are telling
the truth as they don’t have the means to validate hardware and
firmware security claims in RFPs.
- 48% of ITSDM even say that procurement teams are like
“lambs to the slaughter” as they'll believe anything vendors
say.
IT professionals are also concerned about the limitations of
their ability to onboard and configure devices down to the hardware
and firmware level seamlessly.
- 78% of ITSDMs want zero-touch onboarding via the cloud to
include hardware and firmware security configuration to improve
security.
- 57% of ITSDMs feel frustrated at not being able to onboard and
configure devices via the cloud.
- Almost half (48%) of WFA workers who had a device delivered to
their home complained that the onboarding and configuration process
was disruptive.
“You will always need to choose technology providers you can
trust. But when it comes to the security of devices that serve as
entry points into your IT infrastructure, this should not be blind
trust,” comments Michael Heywood, Business Information Security
Officer, Supply Chain Cybersecurity at HP Inc. “Organizations need
hard evidence – technical briefings, detailed documentation,
regular audits and a rigorous validation process to ensure security
demands are being met, and devices can be securely and efficiently
onboarded.”
Challenges and frustrations around the ongoing
management, monitoring and remediation of devices
71% of ITSDMs say the rise in work-from-anywhere models has made
managing platform security more difficult, impacting worker
productivity and creating risky behaviors:
- One in four employees would rather put up with a
poor-performing laptop than ask IT to fix or replace it because
they can't afford the downtime.
- 49% of employees have sent their laptop to be repaired, and say
this took over 2.5 days to fix or replace the device, forcing many
to use their personal laptop for work, or to borrow one from family
or friends – blurring the lines between personal and professional
use.
- 12% had an unauthorized third-party provider repair a work
device, potentially compromising platform security and clouding
IT's view of device integrity.
Monitoring and remediating hardware and firmware threats to
prevent threat actors accessing sensitive data and critical systems
is vital. However, 79% of ITSDMs say their understanding of
hardware and firmware security lags behind their knowledge of
software security. Moreover, they lack mature tools that would give
them the visibility and control they would want to manage hardware
and firmware security across their fleets:
- 63% of ITSDMs say they face multiple blind spots around device
hardware and firmware vulnerabilities and misconfigurations.
- 57% cannot analyze the impact of past security events on
hardware and firmware to assess devices at risk.
- 60% say that detection and mitigation of hardware or firmware
attacks is impossible, viewing post-breach remediation as the only
path.
“Post-breach remediation is a losing strategy when it comes to
hardware and firmware attacks,” warns Alex Holland, Principal
Threat Researcher in the HP Security Lab. “These attacks can grant
adversaries full control over devices, embedding deep within
systems. Traditional security tools are blind to these threats as
they tend to focus on the OS and software layers, making detection
nearly impossible. Preventing or containing these attacks in the
first place is critical to stay ahead, or else organizations risk a
threat they cannot see – and cannot remove.”
Second life and decommissioning – how data security
concerns are leading to an e-waste epidemic
Platform security concerns are also impeding organizations’
ability to reuse, recycle or resell end of life devices:
- 59% of ITSDMs say it's too hard to give devices a second life
and so they often destroy devices over data security concerns.
- 69% say they are sitting on a significant number of devices
that could be repurposed or donated if they could sanitize
them.
- 60% of ITSDMs admit their failure to recycle and reuse
perfectly usable laptops is leading to an e-waste epidemic.
Complicating matters further, many employees sit on old work
devices. This not only prevents devices from being repurposed, but
it also creates data security risks around orphaned devices that
still may carry corporate data.
- 70% of WFA employees have at least 1 old work PC/laptop at home
or in their office workspace.
- 12% of WFA workers have left a job without returning their
device right away – and almost half of these say they never
did.
“IT teams are hoarding end-of-life devices because they lack the
assurance that all sensitive company or personal data has been
fully wiped - which in itself can pose data security risks and
negatively impact ESG goals. Finding a reputable IT asset
disposition vendor that uses the latest industry-standard erasure
or media-destruction processes and provides a data sanitization
certificate so you can meet compliance requirements, is key,”
comments Grant Hoffman, SVP Operations and Portfolio, HP
Solutions.
A new approach to the device lifecycle is needed to
improve platform security
More than two thirds (69%) of organizations say their approach
to managing device hardware and firmware security only addresses a
small part of their lifecycle. This leaves devices exposed, and
teams unable to monitor and control platform security from supplier
selection to decommissioning.
To manage platform security across the entire lifecycle, HP Wolf
Security’s recommendations include:
- Supplier selection: Ensure IT, security and
procurement teams work together to establish security and
resilience requirements for new devices, validate vendor security
claims and audit supplier manufacturing security governance.
- Onboarding and configuration: Investigate
solutions that enable secure zero-touch onboarding of devices and
users, and secure management of firmware settings that don’t rely
on weak authentication like BIOS passwords.
- Ongoing management: Identify the tools that
will help IT monitor and update device configuration remotely and
deploy firmware updates quickly to reduce your fleet’s attack
surface.
- Monitoring and Remediation: Ensure IT and
security teams can find, lock and erase data from devices remotely
– even those that are powered down – to reduce the risk of lost and
stolen devices. Improve resilience by monitoring device audit logs
to identify platform security risks, such as detecting unauthorized
hardware and firmware changes and signs of exploitation.
- Second life and decommissioning: Prioritize
devices that can securely erase sensitive hardware and firmware
data to enable safe decommissioning. Before redeploying devices,
seek to audit their lifetime service history to verify chain of
custody, and hardware and firmware integrity.
For further insights and recommendations download the full
report ‘Securing the Device Lifecycle: From Factory to Fingertips,
and Future Redeployment’ here.
About the data
- WFA sample: A survey of 6,055 office workers that work hybrid,
remotely or from anywhere in the US, Canada, UK, Japan, Germany and
France. Fieldwork was undertaken from 22nd – 30th May 2024. The
survey was carried out online by Censuswide.
- ITSDM sample: A survey of 803 IT and security decision makers
in the US, Canada, UK, Japan, Germany and France. Fieldwork was
undertaken from 22nd February – 5th March 2024. The survey was
carried out online by Censuswide.
About HP
HP Inc. (NYSE: HPQ) is a global technology leader and creator of
solutions that enable people to bring their ideas to life and
connect to the things that matter most. Operating in more than 170
countries, HP delivers a wide range of innovative and sustainable
devices, services and subscriptions for personal computing,
printing, 3D printing, hybrid work, gaming, and more. For more
information, please visit: http://www.hp.com.
About HP Wolf Security
HP Wolf Security is world class endpoint security. HP’s
portfolio of hardware-enforced security and endpoint-focused
security services are designed to help organizations safeguard PCs,
printers, and people from circling cyber predators. HP Wolf
Security provides comprehensive endpoint protection and resiliency
that starts at the hardware level and extends across software and
services. Visit https://hp.com/wolf.
i The global lost/stolen laptop epidemic figure was reached by
taking the average number of laptops reported lost/stolen in the
last year (103) by ITSDMs and the average cost of each lost/stolen
laptop ($2,272). This comes to $234,119. The cost is then
extrapolated across the number of large organizations (with 1,000+
employees) in the same territories as the research scope:
- United States – 17,834 large organizations (US Bureau of Labor
Statistics)
- Canada – 2,868 large organizations (Government of Canada)
- UK – 3,900 (UK Government)
- Japan – 6,557 (eStat – Japanese Government Statistics)
- Germany – 4,304 (OECD)
- France – 1,460 (OECD)
In total, there are 36,923 large organizations. If each lost 103
laptops at an average cost of $2,273 ($234,119) then the global
cost of lost/stolen laptops is $8,644,375,837.
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