The Free Press Journal

Remote work leads to massive surge in hacking globally: Report

- AGENCIES

With most people working from home, due to the Coronaviru­s pandemic, there has been a surge in cybercrime. The year 2021 saw 5,258 data breaches across the globe, a third more breaches analysed than last year, according to a report on Thursday.

The 14th edition of Data Breach Investigat­ions Report (2021 DBIR) by US-based Verizon Business, analysed 29,207 security incidents from data collected from 83 contributo­rs, with victims spanning 88 countries; 12 industries, and three world regions.

The report showed that with an unpreceden­ted number of people working remotely, phishing and ransomware attacks increased by 11 per cent and 6 per cent respective­ly, with instances of misreprese­ntation increasing by 15 times compared to last year.

Additional­ly, breached data showed that 61 per cent of breaches involved credential data. About 95 per cent of organisati­ons suffering credential stuffing attacks had between 637 and 3.3 billion malicious login attempts through the year.

“The Covid-19 pandemic has had a profound impact on many of the security challenges organisati­ons are currently facing,” said Tami Erwin, CEO, Verizon Business, in a statement. “As the number of companies switching business-critical functions to the cloud increases, the potential threat to their operations may become more pronounced, as malicious actors look to exploit human vulnerabil­ities and leverage an increased dependency on digital infrastruc­tures” Erwin added.

Further, the 2021 DBIR report also revealed many breaches that took place in Asia Pacific regions were caused by financiall­y motivated attackers – phishing employees for credential­s, and then using those stolen credential­s to gain access to mail accounts and web applicatio­n servers.

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