According
to the “PWC REPORT”, the cost of a cyberattacks to businesses has more than
doubled in the past year. This should be a wakeup call to other nations – The rise
of cyber-attacks in recent years has proven the need to do more than what has
been done. More collaboration beyond border is extremely needed and the
required skill set on the fight is to be raised along with cybercrime awareness
programs that will eventually add impact to the community.
The
Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) commissioned the survey
which has shown that not only has the cost doubled, but the number of security
breaches has increased.
To
make things even worse, 11 per cent of respondents changed the nature of their
business as a result of their worst breach.
The
average starting costs for a major security breach at large organizations rose
to an average £1.46 million, up from £600,000 last year. Smaller firms were no
less immune to the financial drain caused by a cyberattack. The minimum they
could expect to pay last year for the most extreme breaches jumped to £310,000
from £115,000 in 2014.
The
costs include covering business disruption, lost sales, recovery of assets,
fines and compensation.
Speaking
to The Telegraph as the report was launched, Ed Vaizey, UK Digital Economy
Minister, said: "The UK’s digital economy is strong and growing, which is
why British businesses remain an attractive target for cyberattack and the cost
is rising dramatically. Businesses that take this threat seriously are not only
protecting themselves and their customers’ data but securing a competitive
advantage".
The
survey also found that 90 percent of large organizations suffered a cyberattack
over the year, a rise of nine percentage points. For small businesses the
figure was 74 percent, up from 60 percent a year ago.
Among
the greatest areas of vulnerability are our growing dependence on mobile devices,
as well as human error.
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