Case Studies

Cyber survey

by Mark Rowe

The cost and frequency of cybercrime have both continued to rise for a third year. According to a third annual study of US companies, the occurrence of cyberattacks has more than doubled over a three-year period, while the financial impact has increased by nearly 40 percent. That’s all according to the study by the Ponemon Institute and sponsored by HP.

The 2012 Cost of Cyber Crime Study found that the average annualised cost of cybercrime incurred by a benchmark sample of US organisations was $8.9 million. This represents a 6 percent increase over the average cost reported in 2011, and a 38 percent increase over 2010. The 2012 study also revealed a 42 percent increase in the number of cyber-attacks, with organisations experiencing an average of 102 successful attacks per week, compared to 72 attacks per week in 2011 and 50 attacks per week in 2010.

What they say

Michael Callahan, vice president, Worldwide Product and Solution Marketing, Enterprise Security Products, HP, said: “Organisations are spending increasing amounts of time, money and energy responding to cyberattacks at levels that will soon become unsustainable. There is clear evidence to show that the deployment of advanced security intelligence solutions helps to substantially reduce the cost, frequency and impact of these attacks.”

According to the survey, the most costly cyber-crimes continue to be those caused by malicious code, denial of service, stolen or hijacked devices, and malevolent insiders. When combined, these account for more than 78 percent of annual cyber-crime costs per organisation. Other findings include:

Information theft and business disruption continue to represent the highest external costs. On an annual basis, information theft accounts for 44 percent of total external costs, up 4 percent from 2011. Disruption to business or lost productivity accounted for 30 percent of external costs, up 1 percent from 2011.

Deploying advanced security intelligence solutions can mitigate the impact of cyber-attacks. Organisations that deployed security information and event management (SIEM) solutions realised a cost savings of nearly $1.6 million per year. As a result, these organisations experienced a substantially lower cost of recovery, detection and containment than organisations that had not deployed SIEM solutions.

Cybera-ttacks can be costly if not resolved quickly. The average time to resolve a cyber-attack is 24 days, but it can take up to 50 days according to this year’s study. The average cost incurred during this 24-day period was $591,780, representing a 42 percent increase over last year’s estimated average cost of $415,748 during an 18-day average resolution period.

Recovery and detection remain the most costly internal activities associated with cyber-crime. On an annual basis, these activities account for almost half of the total internal cost, with operating expenses and labour representing the majority of the total.

Dr Larry Ponemon, chairman and founder, Ponemon Institute, said: “The purpose of this benchmark research is to quantify the economic impact of cyber-attacks and observe cost trends over time. We believe a better understanding of the cost of cyber-crime will assist organisations in determining the appropriate amount of investment and resources needed to prevent or mitigate the devastating consequences of an attack.”

With this third annual study of US companies, cyber-crime cost studies also were conducted in Australia, Germany, Japan and the United Kingdom. HP is hosting a series of webinars on the findings from these studies,. Information about this webinar, and those taking place in other regions, is available at www.hpenterprisesecurity.com/ponemon-cost-of-cyber-crime/.

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