June 30, 2016 By Larry Loeb 2 min read

The 2016 “Encryption Application Trends Study,” which is based on independent research conducted by the Ponemon Institute, concluded that the biggest users of encryption are companies in financial services, health care and pharmaceutical, and technology and software industries.

But this latest version of the annual survey, which involved 5,000 respondents and covered 14 major industries across 11 countries, also examined the choice of encryption strategy an organization would use as well as other details about this form of data protection.

More Organizations Embracing an Encryption Strategy

Somewhat surprisingly, overall enterprise use of encryption rose to a level never before seen in the report’s 11-year history. Not only that, but the rate of any reported “extensive deployment of encryption” jumped to 41 percent overall usage, which was also the largest figure recorded over the lifetime of the survey.

The survey found some other characteristics of those who have been using encryption. For example, companies that are more mature with respect to their encryption strategy were more likely to deploy hardware security modules (HSMs). These modules are typically used with SSL/TLS, database encryption and application-level encryption — all the standard data protection measures for the enterprise. Enterprises are using HSMs for encryption when they can, and it seems to be working.

Encryption is most frequently used for databases, internet communications and laptop hard drives, according to the survey. This is likely just the beginning: Expect to see more of these HSMs out there as usage grows. It might even become an important design consideration for the specialized encryption strategy serving organizations in the future, particularly as industry compliance standards become more widespread.

Enterprises Must Grow Encryption Cautiously

These hardware modules may end up being the enterprise version of a gamer’s upgradeable graphic card: There’s room to grow, but the consequences are unknown. Designers looking to gain throughput may overclock them or play hardware tricks, but HSMs have to be reliable in function.

If HSMs end up expanding an enterprise’s attack surface, security professionals and their organizations will face a serious problem. That may put some counterpressure on the developers to clean up the crypto-devices.

Whether it is because of industry regulations, privacy concerns or a need to protect against a data breach, encryption is being adopted by the enterprise in record numbers.

More from

FYSA — VMware Critical Vulnerabilities Patched

< 1 min read - SummaryBroadcom has released a security bulletin, VMSA-2025-0004, addressing and remediating three vulnerabilities that, if exploited, could lead to system compromise. Products affected include vCenter Server, vRealize Operations Manager, and vCloud Director.Threat TopographyThreat Type: Critical VulnerabilitiesIndustry: VirtualizationGeolocation: GlobalOverviewX-Force Incident Command is monitoring activity surrounding Broadcom’s Security Bulletin (VMSA-2025-0004) for three potentially critical vulnerabilities in VMware products. These vulnerabilities, identified as CVE-2025-22224, CVE-2025-22225, and CVE-2025-22226, have reportedly been exploited in attacks. X-Force has not been able to validate those claims. The vulnerabilities…

SoaPy: Stealthy enumeration of Active Directory environments through ADWS

10 min read - Introduction Over time, both targeted and large-scale enumeration of Active Directory (AD) environments have become increasingly detected due to modern defensive solutions. During our internship at X-Force Red this past summer, we noticed FalconForce’s SOAPHound was becoming popular for enumerating Active Directory environments. This tool brought a new perspective to Active Directory enumeration by performing collection via Active Directory Web Services (ADWS) instead of directly through Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) as other AD enumeration tools had in the past.…

Smoltalk: RCE in open source agents

26 min read - Big shoutout to Hugging Face and the smolagents team for their cooperation and quick turnaround for a fix! Introduction Recently, I have been working on a side project to automate some pentest reconnaissance with AI agents. Just after I started this project, Hugging Face announced the release of smolagents, a lightweight framework for building AI agents that implements the methodology described in the ReAct paper, emphasizing reasoning through iterative decision-making. Interestingly, smolagents enables agents to reason and act by generating…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today