Cyber-Risk declines

Trend Micro's Cyber Risk Index finds preparedness is slowly improving.

Trend Micro reports that cyber-risk levels have improved from "elevated" to "moderate" for the first time, but that insiders represent a persistent threat for global organizations.

Jon Clay, VP of threat intelligence at Trend Micro: "For the first time since we've been running these surveys, we saw the global cyber-risk index not only improve but move into positive territory at +0.01. It means that organizations may be taking steps to improve their cyber-preparedness. There is still much to be done, as employees remain a source of risk. The first step to managing this is to gain complete and continuous attack surface visibility and control."

The CRI found that cyber-preparedness improved in Europe and APAC but declined slightly in North and Latin America over the past six months. At the same time, threats declined in every region bar Europe.

Most organizations are still pessimistic about their prospects over the coming year. The CRI found that most respondents said it was "somewhat to very likely" they'd suffer a breach of customer data (70%) or IP (69%) or a successful cyber-attack (78%).

These figures represent declines of just 1%, 2%, and 7%, respectively, from the last report.

The top four threats listed by respondents in the CRI 2H 2022 remained the same from the previous report:

1)    Clickjacking

2)    Business Email Compromise (BEC)

3)    Ransomware

4)    Fileless attacks

"Botnets" replaced "login attacks" in fifth place.

Global respondents also named employees as representing three of their top five infrastructure risks:

1)    Negligent insiders

2)    Cloud computing infrastructure and providers

3)    Mobile/remote employees

4)    Shortage of qualified personnel

5)    Virtual computing environments (servers, endpoints)

Dr. Larry Ponemon, chairman and founder of Ponemon Institute, said: "As the shift to hybrid working gathers momentum, organizations are rightly concerned about the risk posed by negligent employees and the infrastructure used to support remote workers. They will need to focus not only on technology solutions but people and processes to help mitigate these risks."

Based on the global survey results, the greatest areas of concern for businesses related to cyber-preparedness are:

People: "My organization's senior leadership does not view security as a competitive advantage."

Process: "My organization's IT security function doesn't have the ability to unleash countermeasures (such as honeypots) to gain intelligence about the attacker."

Technology: "My organization's IT security function does not have the ability to know the physical location of business-critical data assets and applications."

I-TRACING and Bridewell, the leaders in their respective markets of France and the UK, are joining...
OpenText has introduced OpenText™ Core Threat Detection and Response, a new AI-powered...
orcepoint has launched its next-generation Data Detection and Response (DDR), bringing AI-powered...
New capabilities supercharge proactive risk management, threat modeling, attack path prediction,...
ThreatLocker has unveiled new solutions that further advance its platform’s security and...
Estimated downtime cost individual firms up to US$2m.
Versa has announced the general commercial availability of Versa Sovereign SASE™, uniquely...
FortiAnalyzer leverages a unified data lake, FortiGuard Labs threat intelligence, and AI-driven...