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Kingston University
Industry:Education
Region:Europe, UK
Products
IT Environment Mac, Microsoft Windows and Office 365 Kingston University is a thriving higher education institution spread out over four campuses in southwest London. With more than 17,000 students, 2,000 staff, 6,500 devices — including Macs, PCs, and short-loan laptops — and a sizeable cloud environment to protect, there’s plenty to keep Chief Information Officer Simon Harrison busy. Universities are increasingly in the crosshairs of online attackers who believe porous networks and underinvestment in cybersecurity by some make them an easy target. Data breaches at UK universities have doubled over the past two years, according to FOI data, as state-sponsored hackers and financially motivated gangs look to steal highly valuable research data. Additionally, phishing attempts targeting students have rocketed in recent months, while ransomware is an ever-present danger. “Many of our students use our devices to support their learning and for social activities, which exposes them to attacks. We are looking to protect endpoints and servers from ransomware, malware, spyware and so on,” says Harrison. “If we’re not well protected, people can introduce infected files onto our cloud servers and on-site storage via their own devices or flash drives.” "When we started this journey, we were primarily interested in protecting the devices we owned. But through conversations with Trend Micro, the partner relationship has grown where we are now able to provide Trend Micro Antivirus to our students and staff as well." Simon Harrison, Chief Information Officer, Kingston University Challenges Like many organisations, Kingston University is currently undergoing a digital transformation journey designed to improve learning, teaching, and research outcomes, as well as IT resilience and service delivery. As part of this ongoing, multi-year initiative, security has always been front-of-mind, according to Harrison. Apart from the risk of data loss and ransomware-based service outages — which would have a huge impact on staff and students — there’s a reputational risk if university services are seen to be sending out malware, he explains. To provide assurance to the Board and Audit and Risk Committee, Harrison devised several key requirements:
Industry:Education
Region:Europe, UK
Products
- Smart Protection Suite Complete
- Control Manager
- Endpoint Application Control
- Endpoint Encryption
- Integrated Data Loss Protection (iDLP)
- OfficeScan
- Mobile Security
- Email Security Gateway
- Vulnerability Protection
IT Environment Mac, Microsoft Windows and Office 365 Kingston University is a thriving higher education institution spread out over four campuses in southwest London. With more than 17,000 students, 2,000 staff, 6,500 devices — including Macs, PCs, and short-loan laptops — and a sizeable cloud environment to protect, there’s plenty to keep Chief Information Officer Simon Harrison busy. Universities are increasingly in the crosshairs of online attackers who believe porous networks and underinvestment in cybersecurity by some make them an easy target. Data breaches at UK universities have doubled over the past two years, according to FOI data, as state-sponsored hackers and financially motivated gangs look to steal highly valuable research data. Additionally, phishing attempts targeting students have rocketed in recent months, while ransomware is an ever-present danger. “Many of our students use our devices to support their learning and for social activities, which exposes them to attacks. We are looking to protect endpoints and servers from ransomware, malware, spyware and so on,” says Harrison. “If we’re not well protected, people can introduce infected files onto our cloud servers and on-site storage via their own devices or flash drives.” "When we started this journey, we were primarily interested in protecting the devices we owned. But through conversations with Trend Micro, the partner relationship has grown where we are now able to provide Trend Micro Antivirus to our students and staff as well." Simon Harrison, Chief Information Officer, Kingston University Challenges Like many organisations, Kingston University is currently undergoing a digital transformation journey designed to improve learning, teaching, and research outcomes, as well as IT resilience and service delivery. As part of this ongoing, multi-year initiative, security has always been front-of-mind, according to Harrison. Apart from the risk of data loss and ransomware-based service outages — which would have a huge impact on staff and students — there’s a reputational risk if university services are seen to be sending out malware, he explains. To provide assurance to the Board and Audit and Risk Committee, Harrison devised several key requirements:
- IT security infrastructure must address the growing diversity of the threat landscape
- Proactive threat protection with a high degree of management and granular analytics
- Protection across endpoints and hybrid cloud servers
- Connected, layered defence to complement existing next-gen firewalls
- Regain control of end-user IT by centralising threat and data protection across multiple layers
- Stop ransomware from encrypting endpoints
- Block zero-day malware with signature-less techniques
- Enable users to securely work from the platforms they find most productive
- Protect data with no increase in management or client footprint
- Minimise risks with any mix of real-time, proactive cloud-based security
- Reduce management complexity and overall costs