Patches Aren’t Just for Scarecrows

Avatar photo
Tim Hetzel

Scarecrows have patched overalls to hold their straw bodies together. If their overalls get a hole, the straw falls out, causing the poor scarecrow to end up on the ground as a pile of hay. Not good. Scarecrows need to keep their pants patched. And IT teams need to patch their systems, or they leave themselves open to dangerous vulnerabilities.

Patches Fix Vulnerabilities

Updates, or patches as they are commonly called, are released to repair known bugs and vulnerable holes in software and cloud-based systems. The majority of hacking and security breaches come not from brilliant hackers with new cutting-edge techniques, but rather from long known vulnerabilities that haven’t been patched.  Regular patching reduces the risk to your systems from old vulnerabilities and new ones as they become known.

Patch management involves identifying, acquiring, testing, and installing software patches (or code changes) intended to fix bugs, add features or address any security vulnerabilities.

Could a Patch Take Down My Network?

There is a perception for many that patching systems is dangerous. As a result, many businesses forgo patching their systems, assuming doing so could disrupt critical application integrations.

Every IT and software environment is different, so patching applications can have unexpected consequences, which can result in business disruption. However, failing to patch a system’s vulnerabilities creates an open door for hackers to enter and wreak havoc. The negative possibilities from not patching far outweigh any potential outage from patches causing outages.

To avoid unexpected results from patches, organizations should first keep an accurate inventory or their hardware and software assets. Secondly, IT leaders can test patches on backups of their environment. AirCTRL™ is our solution for managing IT assets and AirGapd™ provides organizations with immutable backups.

How Resilient is Your System?

If a system can’t survive a bad update, how would it handle a ransomware attack? Patching your system is worth the risk.

Think of patching as cyber resiliency testing. In the event of a bad patch, is your system backed up? Immutable backups ensure your system won’t be down for hours, days, or weeks, even if you lose access to software or data in your primary network. The same is true in a ransomware attack or breach. If your IT team is not updating and patching your systems, your company is vulnerable, and attackers could take your business down with even greater costs.

Airiam has experts to work with your team to ensure all your systems are up to date, your backups are happening regularly and stored safely, and your company has all the essential security it needs to avoid a serious breach or ransomware attack. Don’t let your critical data and networks become like a pile of scarecrow hay. Reach out to Airiam to learn how to protect your business today.

New Resources In Your Inbox

Get our latest cybersecurity resources, content, tips and trends.

Other resources that might be of interest to you.

2025 U.S. Tariff: Complete Impact & Action Guide for Small Businesses and SMBs

Executive Summary: What Small Businesses Need to Know About the New Tariffs The April 2025 U.S. tariff announcements represent a fundamental shift in trade policy with immediate consequences for small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs). Taking effect i
Vivian Lee
>>Read More

Podcast: A Story of Resilience from Airiam’s Alex Zelenskiy

 Episode Summary Since Russia attacked Ukraine in February 2022, the war has upended the lives of millions and resulted in the tragic loss of many lives. Amidst the chaos and destruction, there are stories of resilience and goodness. Airiam’s Alex Zel
Avatar photo
Conor Quinlan
>>Read More

Podcast: Voice and Text Phishing

 Episode Summary What are vishing and smishing? Simplified, vishing is voice phishing and smishing is text phishing. Phishing is when scammers or attackers attempt to trick users into revealing sensitive information, sending money, or installing
Vivian Lee
>>Read More