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  4. Why We Need Cybersecurity Whistleblowers

Why We Need Cybersecurity Whistleblowers

Whistleblowers are controversial, but they're essential for cybersecurity by helping protect customers, raising security standards, and promoting security awareness.

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Zac Amos user avatar
Zac Amos
·
Jan. 11, 24 · Opinion
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The term “whistleblower” can carry wildly different connotations depending on who you’re talking to. While some see the practice as noble, others may associate it with disgruntled employees seeking revenge on their employers. Despite the potential controversy, whistleblowers are an essential part of cybersecurity.

Corporate leaders may be uncomfortable with insiders calling them out on their missteps. But when you take an objective, security-minded stance, you’ll see that true whistleblowers do more good than harm. Here are three reasons why.

1. Whistleblowers Protect Customers

The most important role of whistleblowers in cybersecurity is that of a customer advocate. Consumers today have little choice but to trust companies with their sensitive personal data. Unfortunately, organizations don’t always deserve that trust, with data breaches exposing more than 6 million records in Q1 2023 alone.

Not every privacy violation or security failure is as public as a data breach, either. Unsafe business practices or unpatched vulnerabilities may leave people’s data open to attack without them ever knowing about it. If these security missteps don’t publicly cross any legal lines, it takes a whistleblower to expose the practice and hold the firm accountable.

Whistleblowers ensure victims of unsafe cybersecurity practices can get the justice they deserve. The resulting punishments also push the enterprise at fault to change its methods, improving its security posture.

2. Whistleblowers Raise Overall Security Standards

Whistleblowers also improve the security practices of organizations that were never in the wrong. Companies have paid upwards of $1 billion in fines for the kinds of noncompliance whistleblowers may report them for. That doesn’t include the profit loss from losing customer trust, either. Because no one wants that outcome, that threat encourages businesses to embrace higher standards.

Employees aren’t always scared to speak up, either. More than half of all workers who witness misconduct at a business report it. As that trend continues, organizations realize they have more to lose in hiding security flaws than they gain by forgoing necessary protections. Consequently, whistleblowers’ existence pushes leaders to take security best practices seriously.

3. Whistleblowers Promote Security Awareness

Whistleblowers are also good for individual security. Because these cases are public by nature, they spotlight unsafe behavior. Other professionals who hear about the issue can learn what to avoid to remain as secure as possible.

Human error is usually the root cause of cyberattacks, even among experienced workforces. Whistleblower cases address this by turning the conversation toward risky behavior. Employees who may have made the same mistakes as the companies at fault can learn from these errors before making them themselves.

It’s also worth noting how many whistleblower cases arise when leadership doesn’t listen to repeated advice or warnings from IT or security personnel. Consequently, they may inspire other brands to embrace a culture of cybersecurity. The resulting increased communication and training prevents security issues on an employee level.

The Security World Should Encourage and Protect Whistleblowers

Organizations with a strong, healthy cybersecurity culture don’t need to worry about whistleblowers. These cases only happen when an enterprise is doing something wrong and fails to listen to people warning them about it — the kinds of companies that should be held accountable.

Whistleblowers improve the security of the firm they call out, others watching the case, and even individual users. That makes them an essential part of thorough cybersecurity — one businesses should welcome and defend.

Personal data security

Opinions expressed by DZone contributors are their own.

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