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'Alarming' rise in ransomware threats - Verizon report
Thu, 26th May 2022
FYI, this story is more than a year old

There is an alarming rise in ransomware breaches, according to a new report from Verizon.

The Verizon Business 2022 Data Breach Investigations Report (2022 DBIR) examines an unprecedented year in cybersecurity history, and sheds light on some of the leading issues affecting the international cybersecurity landscape.  

Of particular concern is the alarming rise in ransomware breaches, which increased by 13 percent in a single year - representing a jump greater than the past 5 years combined. As criminals look to leverage increasingly sophisticated forms of malware, it is ransomware that continues to prove particularly successful in exploiting and monetising illegal access to private information.

Organised crime also continues to be a pervasive force in the world of cybersecurity. Roughly 4 in 5 breaches can be attributed to organised crime - with external actors approximately 4 times more likely to cause breaches in an organisation than internal actors.

Heightened geopolitical tensions are also driving increased sophistication, visibility, and awareness around nation-state affiliated cyber-attacks.

"Over the past few years, the pandemic has exposed a number of critical issues that businesses have been forced to navigate in real-time. But nowhere is the need to adapt more compelling than in the world of cybersecurity," says Hans Vestberg, CEO and chairman, Verizon.

"As we continue to accelerate toward an increasingly digitised world, effective technological solutions, strong security frameworks, and an increased focus on education will all play their part in ensuring that businesses remain secure, and customers protected," he says.

For many businesses, the past year has also been dominated by supply chain issues, and this trend was also reflected across the cybersecurity landscape. 62 percent of System Intrusion incidents came through an organisations partner. Compromising the right partner is a force multiplier for cybercriminals, and highlights the difficulties that many organisations face in securing their supply chain.

In a finding that exposes the cost of human influence, people remain - by far - the weakest link in an organisations cybersecurity defenses. 25 percent of total breaches in the 2022 report were the result of social engineering attacks, and when you add human errors and misuse of privilege, the human element accounts for 82 percent of analysed breaches over the past year.

Dave Hylender, lead author of the DBIR, says, "Entering its 15th year, Verizon's Data Breach Investigations Report remains the leading authority on assessing the many cybersecurity threats that organisations continue to face.

"And while the report has evolved, the fundamentals of security remain the same," he says.

"Assess your exposure, mitigate your risk, and take appropriate action. As is often the case, getting the basics right is the single most important factor in determining success."

The 2022 DBIR - its 15th edition - analysed 23,896 security incidents, of which 5,212 were confirmed breaches. Data was collected from 87 contributors, both domestic and international, ranging from law enforcement agencies to forensic and law firms to CERTs and ISACs, and government agencies from several countries.