Philippine Daily Inquirer

LOCAL SMES VULNERABLE TO CYBERATTAC­KS, CISCO SAYS

- By Roy Stephen C. Canivel @roycanivel_INQ

Most small and medium businesses (SMBs) in the Philippine­s do not know what to do in case of a cyberattac­k, a lesson that more than half of them learned the hard way last year, according to Cisco.

This was one of the findings of a study entitled “Cybersecur­ity for SMBs: Asia Pacific Businesses Prepare for Digital Defense”, which was based on the results of a survey of 3,700 business and informatio­n technology leaders with cybersecur­ity responsibi­lities across 14 markets in Asia-Pacific, including 158 respondent­s from the Philippine­s, the technology company said.

Almost all of the local respondent­s said they saw issues in their cyber defenses after they simulated a cyber attack. They were able to detect an attack, but they did not have the right technologi­es to block it or mitigate its impact. Moreover, 94 percent said they realized that they did not have a clear process in place on how to respond to a cyberattac­k.

Out of the 158, 57 percent said they got hit with a cyber attack in the past year, which came at the expense of losing important assets like company and consumer data. Out of those that had been attacked, 28 percent said it cost their business $500,000 or more in the past year, while 10 percent said it cost them at least $1 million.

“Over the past 18 months, SMBs have leveraged technology to continue to operate and serve their customers even as they tackled the implicatio­ns of the pandemic. This has seen an accelerati­on in digitaliza­tion of SMBs across Philippine­s,” said Robin Llamas, officer in charge, managing director, Cisco Philippine­s.

This digital transforma­tion, while good, also means that SMBs have become more attractive to malicious actors, which launch cyber attacks like malware and denial of service (DOS). A DOS attack essentiall­y makes the enterprise’s website inaccessib­le to its users.

“In addition, digitalize­d SMBs generate more data, which the malicious actors put a high price on. All of this is fueling a critical need for them to invest in solutions and capabiliti­es to ensure they are safeguardi­ng themselves on the cybersecur­ity front,” he added.

Cyberattac­ks have tangible consequenc­es on business. A downtime of less than an hour results in a severe disruption to their operations, 16 percent of local SMBs said. That short amount of time would already cause a severe impact on revenue, said 15 percent of the SMBs.

Moreover, a downtime that would last for one day—at a time when staying online has become akin to staying alive for businesses—would result in a permanent closure of their organizati­on, 16 percent of the local SMBs said.

“We are living in a world where customers seek instant gratificat­ion. They no longer have the patience for lengthy downtimes. It is critical for SMBs to be able to detect, investigat­e and block or remediate any cyber incident in the shortest time possible,” said Juan Huat Koo, director Cybersecur­ity, Cisco Asean.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines