Ransomware Attacks as Top Threat in India, Compliance Failings Leave Businesses Vulnerable to Brech
Thales announced the release
of the 2024 Thales Data Threat Report,
its annual report on the latest data security threats, trends, and emerging
topics based on a survey of nearly 3000 IT and security professionals in 18
countries across 37 industries. This year’s report found that 93% of IT
professionals globally believe security threats are increasing in volume or
severity, a significant rise from 47% last year.
Threats continue to increase
in volume and severity
The findings of the report indicate that 11% of respondents
experienced ransomware attacks in India in the past year. Despite ransomware
ranked as topmost growing threat by the respondents in the country, only 20% of
have a formal ransomware plan in place, with 10% resorting to paying the ransom
demands.
Ransomware and malware stand out as the fastest-growing threat
of 2024, with 42% of respondents ranking them as topmost fastest growing type
of threat. Cloud assets, including SaaS applications, cloud-based storage, and
cloud infrastructure management, remain the primary targets for such attacks.
The report shows that for a second year running, human error
remains the leading cause of data breaches, with 34% of enterprises pinpointing
this as the root cause.
These insights are drawn from the 2024 Thales Data Threat
Report, conducted by 451 Research. The report sheds light on how businesses are
adapting their data security strategies and practices in response to an
evolving threat landscape.
Compliance is the key to data security
The research found that 40% of respondents in India failed a
compliance audit in the past twelve months – with the report highlighting a
very clear correlation between compliance and data security.
19% of respondents had experienced a breach that very same year.
Operational complexity continues to cause data headaches
Fundamental understanding of what systems, applications, and
data are at risk continue to lag due to changing regulatory and threat
landscapes. Only a third (31%) of Indian organisations are able to fully
classify all of their data, with a worrying 20% stating that they classify very
little or none of their data.
Operational complexity remains a barrier globally. While the
number of respondents reporting five or more key management systems is down
(53% versus 62% last year), the average number declined only slightly (from 5.6
to 5.4).
Wordlwide, the reality of multicloud across services and
changing global data privacy regulations means that data sovereignty is a
leading priority for businesses, with 28% identifying mandatory external key
management as the leading way to achieve sovereignty. 39% said that data
residency would no longer be an issue provided that external encryption, key
management, and separation of duties were implemented.
“Enterprises need to know exactly what they’re trying to
protect. With data privacy regulations continually changing in India and across
the world, enterprises need to have good visibility across their organisation
to stand any chance of staying compliant,” said Ashish Saraf, VP and
Country Director, Thales in India.
“If there’s one key takeaway from this year’s study, it’s that
compliance is key. In fact, respondents that had a good hold over their
compliance processes and passed all their audits were also less likely to
suffer a breach. As India continues to progress in the technological landscape,
we’ll start to see more compliance and security functions coming together. This
would be a huge positive step to strengthen cyber defenses and build trust with
customers,” he added.
Emerging technology poses both threats and opportunities
Looking ahead, the report also explored which emerging
technologies are top-of-mind for IT and security professionals, with 57%
identifying Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a huge source of concern globally.
This was closely followed by IoT (55%) and Post Quantum Cryptography (45%).
That said, worldwide enterprises are also looking at the
opportunities that emerging technologies bring, with over a fifth (22%)
planning to integrate Generative AI into their security products and services
in the next 12 months, and a third (33%) planning to experiment integrating the
technology.
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