Resumen
Errors are unintentional actions, typically taken by an Internal actor, but Partner actor errors also occur. Misconfiguration of database assets being found by Security is a growing problem. Employees sending data to the wrong recipients also continues to be a significant issue.
Frecuencia
919 incidents, 896 with confirmed data disclosure
Threat Actors
Internal (99%), Partner (1%), Multiple (1%) (breaches)
Data compromised
Personal (79%), Medical (17%), Other (13%), Bank (13%), Credentials (13%) (breaches)
The Miscellaneous Errors pattern should be a familiar frenemy from years gone past. We have included this pattern since the beginning, and the errors have remained constant. What can we really say about this pattern? Humans make mistakes, often at scale. This pattern consists of Internal and/or Partner actors only.
We show the breakdown for Internal actors in Figure 61, and they are relatively intuitive since both system administrators and developers typically have privileged access to data on the systems they maintain. However, the adage of ‘to whom much is given, much is expected’ assuredly applies here. When people in these roles do make mistakes, the scope is often of much greater significance than the foibles of an average end-user.
Allow us to take you on a tour of parings—no, not wine and cheese, but Actors and Actions. Given the pairing of sys admins and developers with the Misconfiguration action varieties (Figure 62), you can imagine that this combination can wreak havoc on the confidentiality of an organization’s data, or that of their customers’ or employees’.
The other pairing we frequently observe is data stores (such as relational or document databases or cloud-based file storage) being placed onto the internet with no controls, combined with the security researchers who search for them (Figure 63). These rather undesirable combinations have been on the rise for the past few years.