Companies hit by data breaches are impacted by $4.24 million per incident on average, according to the annual Cost of a Data Breach Report conducted by Ponemon Institute and published by IBM Security, a division of IBM IBM. This cost is up 10% from one year ago and is the highest cost in the 17-year history of the report.
COVID Costs: The COVID-19 pandemic had a deleterious effect on cybersecurity, with a sudden shift to remote learning resulting in 60% of organizations moving their computing needs further into cloud-based services.
But too many organizations failed to adjust their security needs to these IT changes, and the new report found breaches cost over $1 million more on average when remote work was indicated as a factor in the event.
Furthermore, industries that experienced significant operational changes during the pandemic had disproportionately higher data breach costs, most notably with healthcare breaches costing $9.23 million per incident, up $2 million from one year earlier.
The financial services industry and the pharmaceutical sector saw their respective data breaches averaging $5.72 million per incident and $5.04 million per incident.
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A Damaging Byte: The report also found that 44% of breaches personal data — including name, email, password and health records — and compromised user credentials were the most common entry point used by cyber miscreants. Breaches resulting from compromised credentials took an average of 250 days to identify.
Regionally, the most expensive data breaches occurred in the U.S. ($9.05 million per incident), followed by the Middle East ($6.93 million) and Canada ($5.4 million).
The new report culled its information from data breaches of 100,000 records or less, experienced by more than 500 organizations worldwide between May 2020 and March 2021.
Photograph: Piqsels.
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