67% of Indian Government/Essential Services witnessed more than 50% Disruptive Cyberattacks
Palo Alto Networks surveyed 200
Indian IT decision-makers, CTOs, CIOs, and Senior Directors to understand the
state of cybersecurity in India. The respondents belonged to sectors such as
Banking & Finance, Essential Services, Telco/Tech/Communications, Retail/Hotel/F&B,
Transport & Logistics, and Manufacturing.
The survey findings revealed that, although India
saw a remarkable 75% increase in cybersecurity budget allocation for 2023
compared to the previous year (one of the highest increases in the APAC region),
it also experienced the highest number of disruptive cyber attacks.
Furthermore, India faces a substantial risk of
cyber attacks targeting its critical infrastructure, public sector, and
essential services. A notable 67% of Indian government and essential service
entities reported encountering a surge of over 50% in disruptive attacks.
Prioritizing the cybersecurity of essential service networks is paramount as it
safeguards critical infrastructure and ensures seamless delivery of crucial
services, thereby maintaining public safety and national stability.
Key findings from the survey include:
Industries:
· 66% of Indian
manufacturing firms faced increased risks from unsecured IoT devices connected
to the network, far more than other sectors.
· 83% of Transport and
Logistics organizations perceive their risk level as high or very high.
· An
overwhelming 95% of businesses in India claim they are
actively moving to an increasingly automated security stack.
· 48% of Indian
Public, Transport & Logistics organizations and 50% of
Manufacturing organizations sectors believe 5G adoption will widen security
loopholes.
· A higher than
average 34% of Indian banking and financial services say cloud
attacks will disrupt business.
· 69% of Indian
Telcos have faced newfound risks from increased reliance on cloud-based
services and apps.
Cybersecurity risks:
· 45% of Indian
businesses saw more than 50% increase in disruptive attacks -
the highest in APAC.
· 67% of Indian
government and essential services experienced more than 50% increase
in disruptive attacks.
· At 35% Indian
organizations are more concerned about social engineering attacks than the APAC
average (29%).
· 60% of Indian
organizations are concerned about malware (ransomware, spyware, adware) attacks
the most. 57% of Indian Telcos are concerned about Ransomware
the most.
· 94% of Indian
organizations perform regular assessments and forensics for OT related
cybersecurity incidents, this is positive news. Likely driven by the fact
that 89% of these organizations have IT and OT cybersecurity
professionals working under the same/ combined team, higher than the SEA
average of 82%.
· On the other
hand, 24% of these organizations have their OT systems
connected with their Enterprise IT network (not fully air gapped or protected
via a dematerialized zone); a definite cause of concern.
Security outlook:
· 68% of Indian
respondents say ChatGPT will positively impact business tasks like content
creation and report generation.
· India leads APAC in
cloud migration, with 80% of businesses already having a large
proportion of infrastructure on the cloud.
· Over 80% of
Indian businesses discuss cybersecurity at the board level at least every
quarter.
· 42% of Indian
organizations say they are adjusting their cybersecurity strategy to adopt
cloud security.
· 94% of Indian
organizations said they have a 5G strategy in place. However, 45% of
these organizations said that proper segmentation of 5G networks was of top
concern to them (highest in APAC).
“Securing essential services networks is crucial to
protect critical infrastructure and ensure the uninterrupted delivery of
essential services, safeguarding public safety and national stability. Our
findings show that the transport, manufacturing, and public sectors have borne
the brunt of advanced attacks. As India embraces digital transformation, it is
mission critical to have a cybersecurity-first approach,” said Anil Valluri,
Managing Director & Regional Vice President of India & SAARC, Palo Alto
Networks.
“While budgets may be expanding, it is essential to utilize these
resources diligently. Enterprises, regardless of their size, must proactively
adopt a Zero Trust architecture to secure distributed enterprise networks.
Automating the SOC is also essential for improving efficiency, enabling faster
detection and response to cyber threats, and allowing analysts to focus on
strategic initiatives. The convergence of IT and OT has made lateral threat
movement easier than ever and defending against it requires robust security
automation and orchestration,” Anil continued.
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