Information Security Challenges in Local Area Networks: A Comprehensive Analysis of Threats, Vulnerabilities, and Mitigation Strategies
Annotatsiya
Local Area Networks (LANs) constitute the foundational communication infrastructure of modern organizations, yet they remain persistently vulnerable to a broad spectrum of security threats. This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of contemporary information security challenges facing LAN environments, systematically examining threat taxonomies, attack vectors, and mitigation frameworks applicable to enterprise, institutional, and industrial network contexts. We categorize LAN security challenges across four principal dimensions: (1) network-layer attacks including ARP spoofing, VLAN hopping, and spanning tree manipulation; (2) application-layer threats encompassing man-in-the-middle (MITM) interception, DNS poisoning, and credential harvesting; (3) insider threat vectors and privilege escalation pathways; and (4) emerging threats associated with IoT device proliferation and bring-your-own-device (BYOD) policies. Through empirical analysis of 847 security incident reports from Uzbekistani organizations collected over a 24-month period (2023–2025), we identify critical vulnerability patterns and evaluate the effectiveness of countermeasures including network segmentation, zero-trust architecture, intrusion detection systems, and encryption protocols. Our findings indicate that 73.4% of LAN security incidents originate from misconfiguration or inadequate access control policies rather than sophisticated external attacks, underscoring the primacy of administrative and procedural controls. This study contributes a prioritized mitigation framework tailored for resource-constrained organizations in developing economies, with empirical validation of effectiveness metrics.
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