The critical need for watertight security across the IT supply chain

Cybercrime remains a major global concern. Cybercriminals are using increasingly sophisticated approaches and exploiting all possible means to intercept valuable data or disrupt IT systems. Organizations targeted and affected by these attacks, including businesses, critical entities, governments and entire economies, face severe financial consequences and operational disruptions. According to estimates from Statista’s Market Insights, the global cost of cybercrime is expected to increase over the next four years, rising from $9.22 trillion in 2024 to $13.82 trillion in 2028.

One channel used by hackers that is quickly becoming a major concern is the IT supply chain. Cybercriminals exploit vulnerabilities of third parties in an organization’s supply chain such as vendors, suppliers, and logistics and transportation companies to infiltrate the organization’s IT systems or gain access to physical components destined to be implemented in products. Speculation that recent device attacks in Lebanon were the result of third-party manipulation highlights the critical need to better secure not only software supply chains, but also hardware. But how big a threat does the IT supply chain really pose, and what can be done to minimize the risks?

Vincent Lomba

Chief Product Security Officer at Alcatel-Lucent Enterprise.

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