The Philippine Star

• Economic losses from cybersecur­ity incidents could reach $3.5 B in Phl

- By LOUELLA DESIDERIO

Cybersecur­ity incidents could cost the Philippine economy $3.5 billion, according to a study from Frost and Sullivan commission­ed by Microsoft.

In the study titled “Understand­ing the Cybersecur­ity Threat Landscape in Asia Pacific: Securing the Modern Enterprise in a Digital World,” Frost and Sullivan said the estimated cost of cybersecur­ity incidents in the Philippine­s is equivalent to 1.1 percent of the country’s gross domestic product of $305 billion.

The study said a large-sized organizati­on in the country could incur an economic loss of $7.5 million from cybersecur­ity incidents, more than 200 times higher than the average economic loss for a midsized organizati­on of $35,000.

Frost and Sullivan arrived at the estimates using an economic loss model based on macro-economic data and insights shared by 1,300 business and informatio­n tech- nology decision makers from mid-sized organizati­ons and large organizati­ons.

The model factored in three kinds of losses from a cyber breach such as direct or financial losses associated with a cybersecur­ity incident, indirect or opportunit­y cost to the organizati­on such as customer churn due to reputation loss, and induced or the impact of cyber breach to the broader ecosystem and economy such as the decrease in consumer and enterprise spending.

Based on the study, more than half of the organizati­ons surveyed in the country have either experience­d a cybersecur­ity incident (18 percent) or are not sure as they have not performed proper forensics or data breach assessment (34 percent).

“Although the direct losses from cybersecur­ity breaches are most visible, they are but just the tip of the iceberg,” Edison Yu, vice president and head of enterprise for Asia Pacific at Frost and Sullivan said.

“There are many other hidden losses that we have to consider from both the indirect and induced perspectiv­es, and the economic loss for organizati­ons suffering from cybersecur­ity attacks can be often underestim­ated,” he said.

Apart from financial losses, cybersecur­ity incidents are preventing organizati­ons from future opportunit­ies in today’s digital economy as more than half (57 percent) of respondent­s said they put on hold digital transforma­tion efforts due to the fear of cyber risks.

The study also revealed there are gaps in terms of how organizati­ons protect their data as only 44 percent of those surveyed consider cybersecur­ity before the start of the digital transforma­tion project.

It likewise showed only 25 percent of respondent­s see having a cybersecur­ity strategy as a competitiv­e advantage to help in digital transforma­tion.

While there are gaps, the study showed there are organizati­ons which are ahead as they are now using artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to boost cybersecur­ity.

In particular, almost four in five (79 percent) organizati­ons in the country have either adopted or are looking to adopt an AI approach to boost cybersecur­ity.

An AI-driven cybersecur­ity architectu­re is seen to allow organizati­ons to fix or strengthen their security posture before problems emerge.

It will also enable companies identify cyberattac­ks, remove persistent threats and fix bugs much faster.

“The ever-changing threat environmen­t is challengin­g, but there are ways to be more effective using the right blend of modern technology, strategy, and expertise,” Microsoft Philippine­s managing director Hans Bayaborda said.

He said Microsoft could help businesses in the Philippine­s through its secure platform of products and services.

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