Network Service Providers

Network Service Providers Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Network Service Providers, Information Technology Company, Unit 1, 13 Farhnam Street, Parnell, Auckland.

Network Service Providers Limited is a leading network and business solutions company completely focused on delivering business value and total cost of ownership rather than the latest greatest technology. This focus on the business rather than the technology allows us to design and deliver tailored best practice solutions that offer tangible business returns, by intelligently managing your IT, an

d contributing to the bottom line, allowing our customers to focus on what they do best. Since forming in 2002, NSP has designed and implemented solutions for companies in New Zealand, China, South America, the United Kingdom, USA, the Middle East, Australia and the Cook Islands. Our innovative approach ensures our clients, regardless of size, have the freedom, flexibility and ease to develop their IT capability in line with their ongoing business goals.

Well, well, well - another long weekend. And somewhere between now and Tuesday morning, someone is going to try their lu...
28/05/2026

Well, well, well - another long weekend. And somewhere between now and Tuesday morning, someone is going to try their luck.

Attackers love long weekends. The window between Friday at 5pm and Tuesday at 8am is predictable, reliable, and largely unwatched for most NZ businesses.

Not here.

While you're enjoying the break, NSP's monitoring doesn't take a long weekend. No on-call gaps, no "we'll check it Tuesday" - just continuous detection, every hour of every day.

Enjoy the long weekend. We've got it covered.

Learn more: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0WH4w0

You've seen the 'prove you're not a robot' verification box thousands of times. It's one of the most familiar prompts on...
26/05/2026

You've seen the 'prove you're not a robot' verification box thousands of times. It's one of the most familiar prompts on the internet - and there's a fast-growing attack technique built entirely around that trust.

A fake verification prompt appears on what looks like a completely legitimate website. It tells you the check failed and offers a quick fix - a simple keyboard instruction that takes ten seconds. What you've actually done is run a malicious command that gives an attacker access to your machine.

It's known as ClickFix and is one of (the many) fastest growing attack techniques we're tracking and it's effective precisely because the instruction looks completely routine.

Knowing it exists is the first line of defence. Book your teams security awareness here: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0Wrwx0

24/05/2026

We've spent years telling NZ businesses to be suspicious of unexpected emails. Don't click links, verify before you pay, call to confirm...that advice is about to become significantly harder to follow.

AI spoofing uses publicly available images and audio to generate convincing video of real people - your CEO, your CFO, your manager - saying things they never said. The technology is already in everyone's pocket. The attacks are already being used internationally and NZ businesses, most of whom are still losing money to basic email fraud, are nowhere near ready for it.

The reason this is serious isn't the technology. It's that every human instinct we rely on to verify trust - recognising a face, recognising a voice - stops being reliable. You can't train your way out of that. You need process controls that don't depend on human judgement at all.

Full blog and webinar: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0VX_z0

18/05/2026

We see a lot of cyber incidents, and most follow a pattern that's less sophisticated than people expect and more preventable than businesses realise.

Here we have a real example of a CEO travelling overseas, who's email account had no MFA and 15 years of unmanaged history, and a finance team that came within one bank fraud flag of wiring money they'd never see again.

The only thing that stood between them and a significant financial loss was their bank's fraud detection. Not anything they'd put in place themselves.

You can read full blog and watch the webinar here: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0SvVm0

87% of NZ organisations are using AI and only 12% of employees use only the tools their company has approved. That is wh...
14/05/2026

87% of NZ organisations are using AI and only 12% of employees use only the tools their company has approved. That is where risk lives.

AI governance isn't about slowing down adoption. It's about making sure the speed doesn't cost more than it saves.

Read more here: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0S5f40

What's the difference between a business that recovers from a breach in 48 hours and one still dealing with the fallout ...
12/05/2026

What's the difference between a business that recovers from a breach in 48 hours and one still dealing with the fallout three months later? It's not technology.

The businesses that come through intact are the ones that have practiced and are prepared. They know who makes the call to shut down systems, who contacts the insurer and within what timeframe, who talks to clients, and who approves what gets said publicly.

These sound like things every business would know instinctively but under pressure, at 4am, with systems down and a team in panic, they're anything but.

Cyber Insurers know this too and now are pushing for evidence that your business has prepared and tested its incident response - because the data shows it makes a measurable difference to outcomes.

Let's talk: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0Rp690

11/05/2026

Did you know that some insurers require you to notify them within hours of becoming aware of a breach?

Most businesses are so focused on recovery that the insurer call gets pushed down the list. By the time they make it, the notification window has closed and the claim gets declined on that basis alone, regardless of what the policy covers.

It's a common reasons cyber claims fail in New Zealand and almost nobody knows it until it's too late.

Read more here: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0R6JY0

Attackers look for the path of least resistance and in most NZ businesses, it's not hard to find.Three things make a bus...
07/05/2026

Attackers look for the path of least resistance and in most NZ businesses, it's not hard to find.

Three things make a business an easy target:

1. Weak authentication - systems that can be accessed with just a password, no second factor, no approved device requirement.

2. Unmonitored systems - tools that are running but nobody's watching, especially after hours.

3. Predictable payment processes - invoices approved by email, large transfers authorised by a single person, no out-of-band verification.

These are gaps that most businesses know exist but haven't prioritised fixing. The businesses that do fix them become significantly harder targets and significantly better positioned when their cyber insurer starts asking questions.

If you're not sure which of these applies to your business, that's the most useful thing to find out.

Let's talk: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0QQnx0

There's a version of cybersecurity that looks good on paper and does very little in practice.The difference between know...
05/05/2026

There's a version of cybersecurity that looks good on paper and does very little in practice.

The difference between knowing and stopping isn't the quality of your tools - it's whether someone is watching them, interpreting what they're seeing, and acting on it in real time. Most security tools report what happened, where MDR stops what's happening.

When something looks wrong at 2am on a Sunday, it gets investigated and stopped before it becomes your worst week in business.

Lets talk about MDR for your business: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0Qlx60

03/05/2026

One of the biggest disconnects in cyber insurance right now is the language gap between what insurers ask and what they actually expect.

Insurers ask if you have a firewall. You say yes. Done. But when a claim goes to arbitration, they're not asking if you have one - they're asking if it works. Those are completely different questions and almost nobody realises it until they're sitting in front of a denied claim wondering what went wrong.

The application says one thing, the policy means another and the gap between those two is where NZ businesses are losing money they thought they were covered for.

Full blog, including full webinar access: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0Pp_y0

Our geographic isolation is no longer a defence.For a long time, there's been an assumption in New Zealand that we're so...
29/04/2026

Our geographic isolation is no longer a defence.

For a long time, there's been an assumption in New Zealand that we're somehow less of a target than businesses in the US or Europe. We're small, we're remote, we're not worth the effort. That thinking is officially over. The strategy that the New Zealand Government released makes clear that in the digital world, there are no borders and NZ businesses are being targeted just as aggressively as anywhere else.

The numbers back it up. New Zealanders are now losing an estimated $1.6 billion annually to cybercrime. Not globally - here, in New Zealand.

The strategy outlines four pillars: understand the threat, prevent and prepare, respond, and partner. Good framework. But frameworks only work if businesses actually act on them and as anyone working in this space knows, the gap between awareness and action in NZ is still significant.

If you haven't read the strategy, it's worth the read. If you have, the question worth sitting with is: does your business actually meet the standard it's calling for?

If you're not sure, that's the most useful thing to find out. Book a cyber risk assessment with our team - we'll tell you exactly where you stand: https://ap1.hubs.ly/y0Pqwq0

Address

Unit 1, 13 Farhnam Street, Parnell
Auckland
1052

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 6pm
Tuesday 8am - 6pm
Wednesday 8am - 6pm
Thursday 8am - 6pm
Friday 8am - 6pm

Telephone

+6493060230

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