Hong Kong: A new study has revealed the prospect of improved security and privacy capabilities are the main motivations behind private 5G wireless network projects.
The Trend Micro commissioned and 451 Research-conducted study found that global organisations are ready to team up with partners to drive private 5G wireless network projects. This is mainly due to the improved security and privacy capabilities that have increased prospects around private 5G wireless network projects.
“Private 5G networks are cloudy: two-thirds of respondents told us their deployments will use the technology in some way,” said Eric Hanselman, Chief Analyst of 451 Research, a part of S&P Global market intelligence.
“Yet the cloud’s shared responsibility model means these enterprise customers will need to build their own security capabilities. They said they’ll need expert security partners to help them on this journey. Organisations have great expectations for 5G security, but the quality of their partnerships will be the real differentiator,” added Hanselman.
Across smart factories, smart hospitals, and other locations, a growing range of organisations is looking to private 5G networks for coverage, control, low latency, and enhanced security as one of the enterprise networks.
“We see security risk management as one of the key drivers of the business. There is also a strong desire to focus on ensuring organisations achieve situational awareness across IT, OT, and CT communication technology, such as private 5G,” said Yohei Ishihara, Security Evangelist – Trend Micro.
However, such environments raise a different set of security issues than those in traditional IT and OT environments. While the biggest concern (31%) for respondents is the exposure of data carried on the private wireless network, they also highlighted top key attack vectors, including:
OS software vulnerabilities (37%)
Configuration errors (34%)
Networking equipment vulnerability (33%)
Device vulnerabilities on RAN (31%) and CORE (27%) networks
Compromise of connected network (27%)
Adding further challenges to security projects is the fact that nearly a quarter (23%) of respondents expect full integration of private wireless network security with existing operational security. More than half (55%) also want to make this work via automated connections.
Given the complexity of such projects, it is not surprising that over half (58%) of respondents said they would carry out risk assessments either jointly with partners or outsourcing the task completely, while 33% said they would work with a third party.
Industry-specific security experience (24%) is the top criteria for organisations looking for IT partners, and 19% of them say they want to work with existing partners. 400 information security decision-makers from 400 US, Germany, UK, and Spain organisations were polled for this commissioned study.