In recent years, all kinds of organizations have faced cyber threats and attacks – from small cupcake businesses and blog sites to banks, streaming platforms, and government agencies. Attacks have far-reaching implications – financially, reputationally, and legally.
As a result, proactive security is emerging as a top concern for everyone. And penetration testing is an important tool in every organization’s security strategy to achieve proactiveness, right from the software development stage.
In this article, we delve further into why penetration testing is necessary and how to ensure it fits into your security strategy.
Penetration Testing (pen-testing) is the systematic process of evaluating the application/ network by exploiting its vulnerabilities/ flaws/ security weaknesses in a secure environment.
It is a simulated cyber-attack wherein trusted security experts probe for vulnerabilities and safely exploit them using techniques that an attacker may use. The overarching goal of pen-testing is to detect vulnerabilities in the system before the attackers can and taking necessary steps to remediate them.
While pen testing can be automated, it is best to have it done manually by experienced and trusted penetration testing service providers or certified security experts. Automated pen-tests are a great way to create a strong security baseline by ushering agility to the process. However, manual pen-tests are more in-depth and necessary to identify vulnerabilities that automation cannot.
To ensure proactiveness in security and to meet with the compliance frameworks, penetration testing needs to be done regularly. By regularly, we mean it should be done every 6 months/ 1 year.
Penetration testing takes your security strategy from being reactive and/or ineffective to being proactive and effective.
For instance, when you integrate pen-testing in your software development stages, you save massive amounts of time and money. How? You identify security misconfigurations and flaws when the app/ software is still in development, where it is easier to fix rather than making it live, being breached and then finding a fix for the vulnerabilities). You essentially reduce the need for multiple test-patch-retest cycles.
It is crucial to understand that pen-testing isn’t the be-all and end-all of security. It is one part of security. It is a tool and not a strategy. It is useful only when the findings of pen-testing are translated into actions – prevention, mitigation, and remediation of vulnerabilities and integrated into the security strategy. While including pen-testing, you should not neglect the basics of security – scanning, vulnerability management, and security education.
Pen-testing is not cheap. It requires resources, time, money, and planning. That is why you need to define the scope by setting priorities through a risk-based approach. Mission-critical assets require the most attention as they could cause the business to collapse if compromised.
Technology is evolving at a rapid pace and so is the threat landscape. Given this scenario, your security strategy from 6 months ago or earlier will not be effective. It needs to keep evolving and adapting to the changing landscape. Pen-testing in combination with automated scanning helps you in doing so.
Pen-testing is effective and beneficial only when it is done by experienced and trusted penetration testing service providers like Indusface. So, make sure you choose the right pen-testing solution from the right provider.
Penetration testing is an investment. It saves time, money, and hassle-costs and the mammoth reputational damages arising out of cyber-attacks. That is why it fits right into your security strategy!
Zohocorp, the company behind ManageEngine, has released a security update addressing a critical SQL injection…
A critical new vulnerability has been discovered in Citrix’s Virtual Apps and Desktops solution, which…
Sonatype, the company behind the popular Nexus Repository Manager, has issued security advisories addressing two…
Cybersecurity researchers have detected the active exploitation of a zero-day vulnerability in GeoVision devices, which…
A critical security flaw has been uncovered in certain TP-Link routers, potentially allowing malicious actors…
SilkSpecter, a Chinese financially motivated threat actor, launched a sophisticated phishing campaign targeting e-commerce shoppers…