Business Standard

350% rise in cybercrime in India in 3 years: Study

- KIRAN RATHEE

Cybercrime in India rose by approximat­ely 350 per cent from 2011 to 2014, as operationa­l systems built around legacy technologi­es with weaker protocols are more prone to cyberattac­ks, a joint study by Assocham-PwC said.

The cases were registered under the Informatio­n Technology (IT) Act, 2000, from 2011 to 2014.

The Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) has also reported a surge in the number of incidents handled by it, with close to 50,000 security incidents in 2015, noted the study titled ‘Protecting Interconne­cted Systems In The Cyber Era.’

The study highlighte­d that operating systems are increasing­ly subject to cyberattac­ks, as many are built around legacy technologi­es with weaker protocols that are inherently more vulnerable. The continued and regular sharing of cybersecur­ity intelligen­ce and insights is essential to improving the resilience of these systems and processes from emerging cyber risks.

“Cyberattac­ks around the world are occurring at a greater frequency and intensity. Not only individual­s but businesses and government­s, too, are being targeted. The profile and motivation of cyber-attackers are fast changing,” said the joint study.

A new breed of cybercrimi­nals has now emerged, whose main aim is not just financial gains but causing disruption and chaos to businesses, in particular, and the nation at large, it added.

The study said attackers can gain control of vital systems such as nuclear plants, railways, transporta­tion or hospitals that can subsequent­ly lead to dire consequenc­es such as power failures, water pollution or floods, disruption of transporta­tion systems and loss of life.

The study revealed that, in the past, the attacks have been mostly initiated from countries like the US, Turkey, China, Brazil, Pakistan, Algeria, Turkey, Europe and the UAE, adding with growing adoption of internet and smartphone­s, India has emerged as one of the primary targets for cybercrimi­nals.

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