Cymulate announced the results of a survey,
revealing that two-thirds of companies who have been hit by cyber-crime in the
past year have been hit more than once, with almost 10% experiencing 10 or so
more attacks a year. Research taken from 858 security professionals
surveyed across North America, EMEA, APAC and LATAM across a wide range of
industries including technology, banking, finance and government, also
highlighted larger companies are experiencing shorter disruption time and
damage to business with 40% reported low damage compared with medium-size
businesses (less than 2,500 employees) which had longer recovery times and more
business affecting damage.
Other highlights include:
- 40%
of respondents admitted to being breached over the past 12 months.
- After
being breached once, statistics showed they were more likely to be hit
again than not (66%).
- Malware
(55%), and more specifically ransomware (40%) and DDoS (32%) were the main
forms of cyber attacks experienced by those surveyed.
- Attacks
primarily occurred via end-user phishing (56%), via third parties
connected to the enterprise (37%) or direct attacks on enterprise networks
(34%).
- 22%
of companies publicly disclosed cyber attacks in the worst-case breaches,
with 35% needing to hire security consultants, 12% dismissing their
current security professionals and 12% hiring public relations consultants
to deal with the repercussions to their reputations. Top three best
practices for cyberattack prevention, mitigation and remediation include
multi-factor authentication (67%), proactive corporate phishing and
awareness campaigns (53%), and well-planned and practiced incident
response plans (44%). Least privilege also ranked highly, at 43%.
- 29%
of attacks come from insider threats - intentionally or unintentionally.
- Leadership
and cybersecurity teams who meet regularly to discuss risk reduction are
more cybersecurity-ready - those who met 15 times a year incurred zero
breaches whereas those who suffered six or more breaches met under nine
times on average.
"Surprisingly,
the survey shows that victims of attacks do not double down on their defenses
once they have been hit and they are largely seen by hackers as easy, lucrative
prey", said Eyal Wachsman, CEO and Co-Founder of Cymulate. "However, it's great
to see businesses are showing progress in other areas. Increased awareness and
understanding of cyber risk at the boardroom level is making a substantial
impact as the results illustrate that companies who are more proactive on this
front incur less breaches. Another positive note is that larger corporations
who have suffered breaches are recovering quicker and experiencing less damage
from a business perspective, indicating that they have enhanced their
capabilities to mitigate attacks and prevent damage."
Access the full report.