NZ Organisations Rank Cyberattacks as #1 Risk
News Release
New Zealand Organisations
Rank Cyberattacks as the Number One Risk to their Business
Social Media, the Consumerisation of IT &
Mobile Computing Drive New Zealand Security
New Zealand businesses rate cyberattacks as a more significant source of risk to their operations than terrorism or natural disasters, according to new research conducted by Symantec Corp. (NASDAQ: SYMC).
The 2011 State of Security Study asked 100 New Zealand organisations to identify the most significant threats facing their organisations. Cyberattacks emerged as the most significant risk, ranking above accidental IT incidents and IT attacks conducted by insiders which respondents said are the second and third most significant risks. Traditional crime, natural disasters, brand-related events such as incidents that cause negative publicity, and terrorist acts were rated the fourth through seventh most significant risks.
Concern about cyberattacks is well-founded with two-thirds (64 percent) of the surveyed businesses having experienced a cyberattack in the past 12 months. In addition, one-tenth (10 percent) experienced an increase in the frequency of cyberattacks.
“High profile IT exploits witnessed throughout 2011 demonstrate that criminals are going after valuable targets around the world, a trend that is reflected in the study’s finding that Kiwi businesses see cybersecurity as increasingly important,” said Steve Martin, director, SMB, Pacific region, Symantec.
Mobile Computing, Social Media & the
Consumerisation of IT Drive New Zealand
Security
The survey also found that
cybersecurity is more important to New Zealand businesses
now than it was one year ago. In fact, more than one third
(39 percent) see cybersecurity as being somewhat or
significantly more important than 12 months ago.
The
importance of cybersecurity is largely being driven by three
key industry trends. The rise of social media in the
business was identified as the technology most respondents
saw as increasing the difficulty of securing their
operations, with 46 percent seeing it as the most
significant trend. Forty-three percent saw the introduction
of personal devices into the workplace, a trend known as the
consumerisation of IT, as creating new difficulties, while
39 percent worry that the rise of mobile computing will
increase risk.
“The challenge for many businesses is finding the right balance of leveraging productivity-enhancing innovations like mobile computing, social media, the consumerisation of IT, cloud computing and virtualisation whilst not comprising on their levels of cybersecurity. The best approach for any business facing these security challenges is to apply the same levels of security and management to all endpoints – whether mobile, on premise or in the cloud – without exception,” said Martin.
Cyberattacks Cause Downtime, Financial
Cost & Data Loss
Every organisation surveyed
experienced some form of loss as a result of a cyberattack,
the study showed. Twenty percent of businesses experienced a
loss of NZD$70,000 or more as a result of a cyberattack.
More than half of the survey respondents (56 percent)
experienced downtime as a result of cyberattacks; 24 percent
lost other corporate data; 21 percent lost intellectual
property and 20 percent reported theft of financial data or
credit card numbers.
Nearly one in four (22 percent) could not identify what sort of information was taken or impacted as a result of a cyberattack. Organisations surveyed could however pinpoint the nature of attacks and reported that social engineering attacks and malicious code attacks were growing somewhat or extremely quickly.
“The prevalence of data loss caused by cyberattacks reported in this study highlights the need for more stringent cybercrime laws and legislative reforms that require companies to fast-track the notification of their customers of a data breach in New Zealand. We recommend that organisations take a proactive and holistic approach to their IT security that minimises the likelihood of data breaches caused by cyberattacks,” added Martin.
Additional
Findings
• Forty-four percent of respondents
said they have experienced a somewhat or extremely high
level of attacks from both malicious code and social media.
• Forty percent of respondents are pursuing strategic
security initiatives and 38 percent pursuing new security
technologies in response to cyberattacks.
• Mobile
security tools are on the shopping lists for more than a
quarter (28 percent) of New Zealand businesses.
• New
Zealand’s top three growth areas for staffing were web
security (48 percent), network security (45 percent) and
messaging security (43 percent). Businesses identified
growth for budgets much the same, with web security (37
percent), network security (34 percent) and security systems
management (32 percent) leading the way.
• Only 30
percent are increasing spend on end-user training and
awareness while spending on security for virtualised and
public cloud systems is accelerating at 28 and 21 percent
respectively.
Recommendations
• Organisations
need to protect their infrastructure by securing their
endpoints, messaging and web environments. In addition,
defending critical internal servers and implementing the
ability to back up and recover data should be priorities.
Organisations also need the visibility and security
intelligence to respond to threats rapidly.
• IT
administrators need to protect information proactively by
taking an information-centric approach to protect both
information and interactions. Taking a content-aware
approach to protecting information is key in knowing where
sensitive information resides, who has access, and how it is
coming in or leaving your organisation.
• Organisations
need to develop and enforce IT policies and automate their
compliance processes. By prioritising risks and defining
policies that span across all locations, customers can
enforce policies through built-in automation and workflow
and not only identify threats but remediate incidents as
they occur or anticipate them before they
happen.
• Organisations need to manage systems by
implementing secure operating environments, distributing and
enforcing patch levels, automating processes to streamline
efficiency, and monitoring and reporting on system
status.
About the 2011 State of Security
Study
Symantec debuted the State of Security
Study in 2010 and this year has expanded the report to
include small and mid-sized businesses as well. Applied
Research fielded this survey on behalf of Symantec by
telephone in April 2011. Of the New Zealand organisations
surveyed all respondents were all in the 5 to 499 employee
range. The survey has a reliability of 95 percent
confidence with +/- 9.8 percent margin of error.
About Symantec
Symantec is a global
leader in providing security, storage and systems management
solutions to help consumers and organisations secure and
manage their information-driven world. Our software and
services protect against more risks at more points, more
completely and efficiently, enabling confidence wherever
information is used or stored. More information is available
at www.symantec.com.
ENDS