11/18/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 11/18/2024 14:04
This is the second in our blog series on trust/security and human rights. You can find our first blog here.
Identity is the connection between people and technology, and it's the front door to all digital interactions. As the threats we face evolve, Identity has become increasingly important to our communities and workplaces.
Cybercriminals are using generative AI techniquesto orchestrate more sophisticated attacks, leveraging its capabilities to create convincing deepfake content, forge identities, and bypass traditional security measures. Today, there's a 180% increase in attacksversus a year ago, taking organizations on average 290 days to recognize and contain a breach.
Identity is security. Identity is the primary enterprise security entry point for all workforce and consumer applications.Securing digital identities can enable respect for human rights such as privacy, freedom from discrimination, safety, and freedom of expression.
At Okta, loving our customers has always been a differentiator in how we operate.Okta helps our customers stay privacy- and security-forward by designing with these principles in mind. A few ways Okta demonstrates these priorities include:
We believe this can drive meaningful impact. According to Microsoft, the nonprofit sector is the third most targeted, with 41% of non-government organizations (NGOs) reportinghaving been victims of a cyberattack within the past three years (2020-2023).
To learn more about howmarginalized communities often bear a disproportionate burden of cyber threats and vulnerabilities, including the nonprofits who serve these communities, watch our Oktane24 on Demand session recording.
Okta's visionis to free everyone to safely use any technology. As such, safety is at the very core of Okta's DNA, guiding our decision-making and our outcomes over the long term. A few ways Okta puts safety into practice include:
Earlier this year, we launched the Okta Secure Identity Commitment, a pillar of which is "Raising the bar for our industry." While this was detailed in the first blog of this series, Okta made a major announcement at Oktane24 in October.
To advance security for the tech sector, Okta is part of an OpenID Foundation working group to establish a new Identity security standard, the Interoperability Profile for Secure Identity in the Enterprise (IPSIE). The vision of this new, open standard is to provide a framework for SaaS companies to enhance the end-to-end security of their products across every touchpoint of their technology stack.
"Okta is focused on elevating the entire technology industry to be better protected from attacks," Todd McKinnon, Okta's CEO and Co-Founder, said when introducing IPSIE at Oktane24. "Our goal with IPSIE is to standardize identity security and help foster an open ecosystem where building and using enterprise applications that are secure by default is easy for everyone."
Thousands of applications in the cloud today are built without secure Identity. This effort aims to help raise the bar for security, thereby respecting human rights like privacy.
It's both a challenging and exciting time to be at the forefront of Identity. It has never been more important to secure people, communities, their data, and their digital rights. Advancements in technology will help and hinder our efforts in equal measure as we enter 2025. AI tools must be implemented responsibly, within consistent ethical norms, secured and controlled to make good on the promise they've shown so far. Criminals and malicious actors have never had such commodity access to advanced technology, and security teams remain stretched, needing to maximize security return on their investments.
In light of today's rapid change of pace, Identity protection and the benefits of what's possible need to be made equally available to everyone.Okta's vision to free everyone to safely use any technologyis more important than ever.