Social experiment: 200 USB flash drives left in public locations

Nearly one in five people who found a random USB stick in a public setting proceeded to use the drive in ways that posed cybersecurity risks to their personal devices and information and potentially, that of their employer, a recent experiment conducted on behalf of CompTIA revealed.


With the cybersecurity threat landscape facing companies growing increasingly complex, employees who practice unsafe cybersecurity habits put both themselves and their employer at risk.

“We can’t expect employees to act securely without providing them with the knowledge and resources to do so,” said Todd Thibodeaux, president and CEO, CompTIA. “Employees are the first line of defense, so it’s imperative that organizations make it a priority to train all employees on cybersecurity best practices.”

Yet according to a survey of 1,200 full-time workers across the U.S., 45 percent say they do not receive any form of cybersecurity training at work. Among companies that do administer cybersecurity training, 15 percent still rely on paper-based training manuals.

In a social experiment, 200 unbranded USB flash drives were left in high-traffic, public locations in Chicago, Cleveland, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. In about one in five instances, the flash drives were picked up and plugged into a device. Users then proceeded to engage in several potentially risky behaviors: opening text files, clicking on unfamiliar web links or sending messages to a listed email address.

“These actions may seem innocuous, but each has the potential to open the door to the very real threat of becoming the victim of a hacker or a cybercriminal,” Thibodeaux noted.

Contributing to the potential cyber threat, the survey found 94 percent of full-time employees regularly connect their laptop or mobile devices to public Wi-Fi networks; and of those, 69 percent handle work-related data while doing so.

Employees also practice poor password protection, as 38 percent of employees have repurposed work passwords for personal purposes.


Further, 36 percent of employees use their work email address for personal accounts, while 38 percent use work passwords for personal accounts. This generates more points of exposure for organizations, and can be difficult to address without better training to spur behavioral changes.

Additional highlights from the survey include:

  • 63 percent of employees use their work mobile device for personal activities.
  • 27 percent of Millennials have had their personal identifiable information hacked within the past two years compared to 19 percent of all employees.
  • 41 percent of employees do not know what two-factor authentication is.
  • 37 percent of employees only change their work passwords annually or sporadically.

Age also factors into cybersecurity awareness; Baby Boomers, Gen X and Millennials each present unique security challenges and risks to organizations. Forty-two percent of Millennials have had a work device infected with a virus in the past two years, compared to 32 percent for all employees. Forty percent of Millennials are likely to pick up a USB stick found in public, compared to 22 percent of Gen X and nine percent of Baby Boomers.

“With the wave of new workers coming in, organizations need to take extra precautions and make sure they have effective training in place,” said Kelly Ricker, senior vice president, events and education, CompTIA. “Companies cannot treat cybersecurity training as a one-and-done activity. It needs to be an ongoing initiative that stretches to all employees across the organization.”

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