The Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) is a federal act passed in 2002 following financial scandals at Enron Corp., Tyco International, and WorldCom. The fallout from these events led Congress to strengthen disclosure and auditing requirements for public companies to restore investor confidence in U.S. capital markets. The SOX Act is a lengthy document, but the following are key things companies must do to comply:
Financial reporting was the primary concern when the bill was passed, but financial data and data security were also considered. Now, 20 years later, the role of technology is much more significant, and SOX cybersecurity compliance is a primary concern for companies that must meet SOX requirements. According to the FBI Internet Crime Report for 2020, $4.2B in losses were reported in 2020 (up from $1.4B in 2017), and Gartner Hot Spots lists cyber vulnerabilities as one of the most critical risk areas for auditors to address.
According to the FBI Internet Crime Report for 2020, $4.2B in losses were reported in 2020.
Recommended Reference: The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 is available on the Public Company Accountability Oversight Board (PCAOB) site.
The primary role of SOX cybersecurity compliance is creating and implementing reliable internal control processes for information technology (IT) infrastructure and applications containing financial data in financial reports. The goal is to have the information and reports prepared and available as quickly as possible in the event of a security breach.
The primary role of SOX cybersecurity compliance is creation and implementation of reliable internal control processes.
In 2018 SOX cybersecurity compliance gained more attention due to guidance from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The SEC guidance called for the highest levels of a company's leadership to expand their corporate governance to:
The SEC guidance called for the highest levels of a company's leadership to expand its corporate governance.
This shift requires IT staff to go beyond their usual areas of expertise and engage with financial teams for comprehensive risk assessment and incident response planning. Two sections of SOX are specifically related to cybersecurity and protecting sensitive data:
So, how can internal stakeholders develop cybersecurity risk management strategies that reduce the risk of cyberattacks and meet SOX requirements? Document and data collaboration platform Workiva recommends the following as best practices for SOX controls and compliance:
In the event of a SOX audit with external auditors, your company will be assessed for compliance with the following five sections:
SOX compliance is costly in terms of time and money, but non-compliance will cost a company even more. Punishment beyond fines against individuals and the organization can include removal from public stock exchange listings and having D&O insurance policies canceled. One way to streamline SOX compliance audits and cybersecurity is to combineCloudConnexa and the NIST Cybersecurity Framework.
CloudConnexa is a critical component of a layered security approach that provides DNS-based content filtering to mitigate malware, phishing, and other attack vectors. This virtualized networking solution includes firewall capabilities, enterprise-grade encryption, IDS/IPS, access controls, and user authentication.
SOX compliance is costly in terms of time and money, but non-compliance will cost a company even more.
Cyber Shield, a built-in feature of CloudConnexa, provides Traffic Reporting with detailed statistics on traffic threats (malware, intrusion, DOS) and the device of origin. Network administrators can use detailed DNS Filter Reporting (exportable to CSV) on observed and blocked domain name queries from users for risk assessment and refining security policies.
The NIST Cybersecurity Framework outlines five straightforward steps firms can take to protect their networks and government agencies using their services from cybercrime:
This diagram explains what each step involves:
The Framework's guidance, based on existing standards, guidelines, and practices for managing and reducing cybersecurity risk, combined with an CloudConnexa secure, virtualized network, allows organizations to protect their data while enabling secure connectivity between employees, devices, and networks.
Good to Know: System and Organization Controls (SOC) is a suite of service offerings CPAs may provide in connection with system-level controls of a service organization or entity-level controls of other organizations. SOC certification may be viewed as a prerequisite for service providers to work with high-profile or tier-one organizations.
See how OpenVPN can help your company's SOX cybersecurity compliance efforts. Get started today with three free connections.