403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
New Survey Reveals Critical Need To Shift From Legacy Web Forms To Secure Data Forms As 88% Of Organizations Experience Security Incidents
(MENAFN- Mid-East Info) Kiteworks, which empowers organizations to effectively manage risk in every send, share, receive, and use of private data, today released its comprehensive 2025 Data Security and Compliance Risk: Data Forms Survey Report. The research of 324 cybersecurity, risk, IT, and compliance professionals exposes a stark reality: Organizations face a critical security gap between their confidence in web form protection and actual incident rates, with sovereignty and encryption requirements driving an urgent shift from legacy web forms to secure data forms.
The survey findings paint a sobering picture of web form vulnerability in modern enterprises. Despite 64% of organizations rating their security maturity as advanced or leading, an overwhelming 88% experienced at least one web form security incident in the past two years, with 44% suffering confirmed data breaches through form submissions. “The findings are clear. Stop using legacy web forms. Start using secure data forms,” said Tim Freestone, CMO at Kiteworks.“This research reveals a fundamental truth that security leaders have suspected but couldn't quantify. Traditional web forms have become the weakest link in enterprise data protection. Organizations collect their most sensitive information through forms-financial records, health data, authentication credentials, government IDs-yet most form solutions were built for convenience, not security. The industry needs to evolve from treating forms as simple data entry tools to recognizing them as critical infrastructure requiring military-grade protection, complete data sovereignty, and continuous compliance validation.” Attack Landscape Reveals Persistent Threats The report documents widespread and sophisticated attacks targeting web forms across all industries:
The survey findings paint a sobering picture of web form vulnerability in modern enterprises. Despite 64% of organizations rating their security maturity as advanced or leading, an overwhelming 88% experienced at least one web form security incident in the past two years, with 44% suffering confirmed data breaches through form submissions. “The findings are clear. Stop using legacy web forms. Start using secure data forms,” said Tim Freestone, CMO at Kiteworks.“This research reveals a fundamental truth that security leaders have suspected but couldn't quantify. Traditional web forms have become the weakest link in enterprise data protection. Organizations collect their most sensitive information through forms-financial records, health data, authentication credentials, government IDs-yet most form solutions were built for convenience, not security. The industry needs to evolve from treating forms as simple data entry tools to recognizing them as critical infrastructure requiring military-grade protection, complete data sovereignty, and continuous compliance validation.” Attack Landscape Reveals Persistent Threats The report documents widespread and sophisticated attacks targeting web forms across all industries:
-
61% faced bot and automated attacks flooding forms with malicious traffic
47% experienced SQL injection attacks despite widespread adoption of parameterized queries
39% encountered cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities
28% suffered session hijacking incidents
21% experienced man-in-the-middle attacks
-
Centralize governance across all forms to enforce uniform security standards
Enforce end-to-end encryption with FIPS 140-3 validation and field-level encryption
Implement data sovereignty controls with flexible deployment options
Pair real-time monitoring with automated incident response
Automate compliance evidence generation
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment