Analysis shows How Ransomware attacks grew by 50% worldwide
Ransomware
attacks on businesses around the world rose 50% last year, research into
successful cyber-breaches shows.
Its
popularity means malware is now responsible for 51% of all the incidents
analysed in the annual Verizon data breach report.
This
analyses almost 2,000 breaches to find out how firms were caught out by
cyber-thieves.
It also
found that measures taken by some firms after payment systems were targeted
stopped new breaches.
The rapid
rise in the number of successful ransomware attacks was widely expected, said
Marc Spitler, senior manager in Verizon's security research division, simply
because so many malicious hacking groups were adopting the tactic.
"Ransomware
is all about how can they get more money per infected device," he said.
A separate
report by security firm Symantec found that the average amount paid by victims
of ransomware had risen to $1,000 (£775).
Consumers
were likely to be hit straight away with ransomware, said Mr Spitler, but
attacks on businesses were stealthier. Often, he said, attackers burrowed
deeper into a company's infrastructure to find key databases that were then
scrambled before payment was sought.
In most
attacks, booby-trapped attachments sent via email were the main delivery
mechanism for ransomware and other malware, found the report.
"These
attacks are all about getting a foothold on a system," he said, adding
that once attackers were inside an organisation they typically looked to use
the back doors for many different types of attack.
Darren
Thomson, chief technology officer for Symantec in Europe, said its statistics
suggest about one in every 131 email messages was now harbouring some kind of
cyber-threat.
"They
are arriving in Word documents and Excel spreadsheets," he said, "the
messages people get many times a day."
The Verizon
report also spotted a shift in the targets of cyber-attacks with 61% of victims
now being companies with fewer than 1,000 employees.
The good
news, said Mr Spitler, was that some industry sectors that had been hit hard
before, now appeared less often in its attack statistics - suggesting their digital
defences were starting to work.
"The
lack of large retailers suffering point-of-sale intrusions was a glimmer of
hope," he said.
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