Categories: Office SuitesSoftware

Security Experts Urge Caution As Microsoft Office 365 Turns Five

Microsoft’s Office 365 turned five years old on Tuesday, and as the platform is seeing rapid expansion in enterprises computer security researchers have warned that the risks are also becoming more complex, with malicious actions becoming harder to spot, computer security researchers have warned.

After testing that began in October 2010, Office 365 launched on 28 June, 2011 and was originally aimed at corporate users.

It is now the most popular cloud service in the workplace, surpassing Salesforce, something that would have been “unthinkable” two years ago, according to Skyhigh Networks, which provides cloud-based security services.

‘Needle in a haystack’

In a recent study the company found that Office 365 use had increased by 320 percent over nine months ago, with 22.3 percent of those surveyed now using the platform.

The security challenge posed by such rapid growth lies in the difficulty of spotting malicious actions amidst the vast number of “events”, such as file uploads, logins and edits, that pose no risk, Skyhigh said.

Out of 5.6 million events each month, an average of 256 are “anomalous” while only 2.7 represent genuine threats, Skyhigh found.

“That’s a very small number of needles in a very large haystack, one which is only getting bigger,” said Skyhigh’s Nigel Hawthorn in a statement on Tuesday. “IT needs smart analytics that can cope with huge volumes of data to ensure they find the two or three incidents that could be catastrophic.”

Alert fatigue

He said “alert fatigue” is becoming a serious issue, with 30 percent of organisations ignoring security warnings due to the frequency of false positives.

Skyhigh’s research cited the breach of retailer Target as an example of the consequences of alert fatigue – the company’s IT security team ignored a warning that correctly identified the breach before any data was stolen.

“Had they acted immediately, it’s likely the scope of the breachwould have been much smaller,” Skyhigh said in the study, which is available from the company’s website.

Advanced tools

Earlier this month Microsoft said it would boost the security of enterprise deployments of Office 365 with Advanced Security Management, a suite of tools that offers admins threat detection, policy making tools and insights into how the software is being used.

This, Microsoft says, will help protect corporate environments – particularly against Shadow IT – and help IT departments maximise their resources by seeing what how Office 365 is being used and which applications are interacting with it.

Advanced Security Management allows admins to set up anomaly detection policies that scan user activities and issue alerts if a potential breach of network is spotted. There are more than 70 different indicators, including failed logins and inactive accounts, and behavioural analytics to spot any unusual patterns.

Are you a security pro? Try our quiz!

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

EU Widens Investigations Into Chinese Imports, Subsidies

After the United States imposes 100 percent tariffs on certain Chinese goods, Europe widens its…

1 day ago

Reddit Deal With OpenAI Gives ChatGPT Access To Content

OpenAI strikes deal with Reddit to train its AI tech on user posts and give…

1 day ago

Microsoft Invests 4 Billion Euros In France For AI, Cloud

Global spending spree from Microsoft continues, with huge investment for new data centre to drive…

2 days ago

Toshiba Axes 4,000 Staff In Post-Delisting Restructuring Operation

Workforce blow. Newly privatised Toshiba has embarked on a 'revitalisation plan' that will entail the…

2 days ago

European Union Opens Child Safety Probe Into Meta

European Commission opens an official child safety investigation into Facebook and Instagram-owner Meta Platforms

2 days ago