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by nicoburns
2086 days ago
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In my experience users generally do this when their computers are locked down and IT departments are not responsive enough to meet their needs in a timely fashion. It's a paradoxical case of more restrictions making things less secure. |
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It doesn't help that SaaS companies tend to put the things required for security (OIDC, mandatory 2FA, organisation support, sharing restrictions) on the expensive enterprise plans, which mean that IT need to go back to the user and say if they want to use it, they need budgetary approval for the $15k/month version. This either kills it (and makes them sneakily sign up for the personal one) or means it won't get approved until their departments next quarterly budget meeting.
While I understand that SaaS companies want to find unique areas they can use to upsell enterprise customers, I feel pretty strongly about basic security features being used as that leverage. Especially as there are many SMEs like us that work in a regulatorily complex environment but don't necessarily have the budget for the top tier just to get that security (UK finance, so we have GDPR/ePD/PECR as well as PCI-DSS, MIFID II, POCA, and a bunch of other FCA regulations to comply with).
Ultimately this means we end up saying no to users more than we say yes, which as you say, frustrates them and pushes them into shadow IT. Then we need to deploy proxies/CASB to catch users trying to use shadow IT and blocking sites.