KnowBe4 Research Launches 2021 Security Culture Report
Best performers for security culture are the Banking and Financial Services industries and the worst performers were from Education and Construction
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TAMPA BAY, Fla., April 6, 2021 /PRNewswire/ KnowBe4, the provider of the world s largest security awareness training and simulated phishing platform, today announced that its research arm, KnowBe4 Research, has launched the 2021 Security Culture Report. Security culture involves how people think about and approach a more secure environment and this report focuses on those key elements.
The 2021 Security Culture Report more than doubled the sample size from the 2020 report, with more than 320,000 employees in 1,872 organizations around the world. Results from this year s report revealed a large gap between the best performers and the poor performers when it comes to security culture. The best performers were from Banking
Click the thumbs up >Speed cameras should be used to detect vehicles that are being driven without valid insurance, MOT or VED, according to an IAM Roadsmart survey.
It revealed that 90% of motorists, who were surveyed as part of the charity’s annual Safety Culture Report, backed the idea that speed cameras should also be used to catch drivers who are flouting these motoring violations.
Estimates suggest that someone is injured every 20 minutes on UK roads by an uninsured driver and that more than a quarter of motorists don’t even know when their vehicle’s next MOT is due, while there’s around 630,000 unlicenced vehicles in the UK.
Speeding is less socially acceptable than five years ago
Only a minority of drivers believe going 80mph on the motorway is acceptable now, when the majority supported it in 2016
17 Feb 2021
Speeding is deemed less socially acceptable today than it was five years ago, marking a positive change in drivers’ attitudes.
The latest annual Safety Culture Report from IAM Roadsmart (formerly the Institute of Advanced Motorists) surveyed 2,000 UK drivers and found that only 43 per cent believe it’s acceptable to drive at 80mph on the motorway. This is down from 55 per cent believing it was okay in 2016.
In addition, just 23 per cent of respondents thought it was tolerable to drive faster than 80mph on the motorway, whereas 28 per cent accepted this behaviour five years ago.
Speeding considered less acceptable as data shows hotspots fleetnews.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fleetnews.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Potholes are perceived by motorists to be a more significant concern on the road, overtaking texting and drink-driving as a worsening problem, finds IAM RoadSmart.