While 81 percent of SMBs say they have a policy on the use of social networks in place, many also say they have made changes in those policies as a result of an employee's misuse of these sites. Forty-two percent have implemented an Internet use policy as a result of an employee's inappropriate use of social networking site.
Four in 10 of those polled (39 percent) have a policy that prohibits employees from visiting Facebook. Thirty percent block access to Twitter, and 27 percent block video-sharing sites like YouTube.
Two in 10 SMBs (21 percent) allow employees to visit social networking sites only during specific times, such as during lunch break or after work hours.
More than half of those polled (53 percent) say they are "very" or "extremely" concerned about malware infections via social networks. Two out of five (42 percent) are very or extremely concerned about data leakage through social networking sites.
More than one in 10 (12 percent) say sensitive company information has been released via their employee's use of social networking sites this year.
Have a comment on this story? Please click "Discuss" below. If you'd like to contact Dark Reading's editors directly, send us a message.
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. |
Small Businesses, Big Losses: How SMBs Can Fight Cybercrime
Small and midsize businesses are falling prey to cyberattacks that cost them sensitive data, productivity and corporate accounts cleaned out by sophisticated banking Trojans. SMBs are typically on the hook for these losses and lack effective means to prevent them. In this report, we explain what makes these threats so menacing, and share best practices to defend against them.
Five Security Flaws, Five Security Fixes For Small And Midsize Companies
Take a sneak peek at data from the Dark Reading/InformationWeek 2011 Strategic Security Survey, with a focus on the five biggest problems faced by small and midmarket companies. You?ll get a look at key security practices and processes for managing the complexity of security; enforcing policies; assessing risk; preventing data breaches; and managing scarce IT resources.
SMBs in the Crosshairs: Understanding the Threats, Defending the Business
Cybercriminals are not only exploiting small and midsize businesses -- they're targeting them. While thefts of hundreds of thousands or even millions of credit card numbers and personal information records make headlines, many small companies' accounts have been cleaned out. In this Dark Reading Tech Center report, we identify how SMBs are exploited, where their security fails and how they can shore up their defenses.
Other reports from the SMB Security Tech Center:
MORE NEWSFEED >>>