How to secure your SaaS data?
SaaS Supply Chain Risks: Biggest Threat to Your Data
SaaS supply chain attacks pose the greatest risk to your data.
Attackers exploit vulnerabilities in SaaS applications, which serve as entry points into your enterprise. This might be something as basic as stale API tokens or user accounts. Shadow IT is also a major concern.
According to Check Point, on average, IT teams are only aware of 20% of the SaaS applications being used within their organization. This limited visibility can lead to the exposure of sensitive data and escalate into a full SaaS breach.
ZTAA is Not Enough to Secure Risky SaaS-to-SaaS Connections
Traditional Zero Trust Application Access (ZTAA) enforces the principle of least privilege, continuously authenticating and authorizing users and devices, regardless of location. ZTAA secures user-to-SaaS access and incorporates MFA to verify users’ identities before granting access to applications, however, it does not address SaaS-to-SaaS zero trust access.
A few points to consider for securing SaaS apps if you have an existing ZTAA solution
- Permissions unused by SaaS apps should be removed. This includes read/write privileges for your emails, cloud services, calendars, etc.
- If an application doesn’t need to read your emails, it shouldn’t have access to them
- Remove abandoned, legacy, and deprecated applications. They are no longer maintained, do not receive patches to keep them secure and they pose a serious risk to your organization
Existing security solutions such as SSEs, CASBs, and traditional SSPMs do not do this. These
solutions all lack visibility into SaaS-to-SaaS connections.
SSEs and CASBs: CASBs, which comprise a key component of SSE solutions, are primarily designed to monitor sanctioned SaaS connections, as well as observe a long tail of shadow SaaS apps. However, they often examine these connections in isolation, lacking a focus on SaaS-to-SaaS connections.
SSPM: SSPMs are pre-integrated via APIs into major SaaS platforms. They do not perform discovery of all SaaS applications in your ecosystem and cannot detect if a rogue or deprecated app is connected. This places your applications at high risk of exploitation to serve as an entry point into your organization.
You cannot protect what you cannot see.
Security Upgrade: Adopting Zero Trust for App-to-App Access
Adopting a Zero Trust approach for App-to-App access is the most effective way to prevent SaaS supply chain attacks.
The table below highlights how zero trust principles from user access can be adapted to the world of SaaS-to-SaaS connections.
User to app Access | SaaS-to-SaaS Access |
Strong Authentication for user-to-app Access
MFA is required for user-to-app access. MFA adds an extra security layer for verifying user identities and ensuring that access is granted only to authorized individuals. |
Strong Authentication for app-to-app Access
Modern authentication is required for app-to-app access.
|
Principle of least Privilege for User-to-App Access
Role-based Access Control or permissions are defined to grant users the appropriate level of access, distinguishing between privileged (read/write) and standard (e.g., read-only) access levels |
Principle of least Privilege for App-to-App access
|
Remove stale user accounts
Remove or update permissions for users who have left the organization or changed roles. |
Remove stale API tokens
|
Remove compromised users
Compromised users should be removed or their passwords immediately changed
|
Remove compromised apps
Conventional solutions cannot distinguish if an app is compromised.
|
Prevent the Next SaaS Supply Chain Attack with Harmony SaaS
Many organizations have already begun adopting a Zero Trust approach and enforcing the principle of least privilege to secure user access to sensitive data and company resources.
Harmony SaaS applies a zero trust App-to-App access approach to give you full visibility into your entire SaaS ecosystem, eliminating risky SaaS-to-SaaS connections and safeguarding you from threats such as data exfiltration, account takeover, and supply chain attacks.
Harmony SaaS goes beyond traditional SSPMs by automating SaaS threat prevention using machine learning to detect anomalous behavior. Discover risky apps in your SaaS ecosystem with single-click remediation.
Visit Harmony SaaS to learn more or sign up for a demo today.