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67% Indian businesses hit by ransomware: Survey

ANI  |  New Delhi [India] 

67 percent Indian businesses have been hit by ransomware, due to which business entities are spending nearly USD 1.17 million to rectify the impact of the cyber attack, a survey conducted by Sophos, a network and endpoint provider noted.

Titled 'The State of Endpoint Today', the survey shows the extent to which Indian businesses are at risk of repeated attacks and are vulnerable to exploits, for which polled more than 2,700 IT decision makers across mid-sized businesses in 10 countries worldwide, including the US, Canada, Mexico, France, Germany, UK, Australia, Japan, and

continues to be a major issue across the globe with 54 percent of organisations surveyed hit in the last year and a further 31 percent expecting to be victims of an attack in the future. On average, respondents impacted by were struck twice.

"Today's persistent cybercriminals are deploying multiple attack methods to succeed, whether using a mix of in a single campaign, taking advantage of a remote access opportunity, infecting a server, or disabling software. If IT managers are unable to thoroughly clean and other threats from their systems after attacks, they could be vulnerable to re-infection. No one can afford to be complacent," said and (Sales)

This relentless attack methodology combined, with the growth in Ransomware-as-a-Service, the anticipation of more complex threats, and the resurgence of worms like WannaCry and NotPetya puts businesses in serious need of a makeover, according to In fact, more than 90 percent of Indian IT decision makers surveyed impacted by were running up to date endpoint protection, confirming that traditional endpoint is no longer enough to protect against today's attacks.

According to those impacted by last year, the median total cost of a attack was USD 133,000. Indian organisations median total cost stood at USD 1.17 million, the highest, in rectifying the impacts of This extends beyond any ransom demanded and includes downtime, manpower, device cost, network cost, and lost opportunities.

IT professionals also need to be aware of how exploits are used to gain access to a company's system for data breaches, distributed-denial-of-service attacks, and cryptomining. Sophos' survey revealed considerable misunderstanding around technologies to stop exploits with 72 percent unable to correctly identify the definition of

Intrusions from exploits also have been happening for years but are still a prominent threat and often go undetected for months, if not years. Once inside a system, cybercriminals use complex malware that can hide in memory or camouflage itself. In many cases, businesses do not know they've been breached until someone finds a large cache of stolen data on the Dark Web.

Although 94 percent of respondents admitted their endpoint defenses need to be stronger to block the attacks seen last year, only 34 percent have predictive threat technologies, such as machine or deep learning, leaving 66 percent vulnerable to repeated attacks, exploits, and evolving advanced threats. Sixty three percent plan to implement within a year, yet confusion about it persists. Of those surveyed, 37 percent admitted that they do not have a full understanding of the differences between and deep learning.

"It is important for organisations to keep up in this dynamic world of IT threats. Organisations need effective anti-ransomware, anti-exploit, and to stay secure in 2018 and beyond," said Sunil.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 16 2018. 13:50 IST
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