Why do organizations need to prioritize cyber resiliency?
OpenText announced a report which provides in-depth analysis, market insights, trend data, and predictions for what lies ahead as organizations move toward strengthening their cyber resiliency posture in the face of ever-increasing cyberattacks and cyber warfare.
Remote and hybrid work environments, along with rapidly shifting world affairs, continues to alter how we interact and presents new security challenges that opens lucrative avenues for bad actors.
Last year, phishing attacks escalated across email, text, and other communications platforms and new high-risk malicious URLs were found hiding behind proxy avoidance and anonymizers. Alternatively, while browser-based cryptojacking may have practically disappeared, cryptomining malware shifted into mainstream as cybercriminals continue looking for ways to compromise data and personal information.
“Businesses’ ability to prepare for and recover from threats will increase as they integrate cyber resilience into their technologies, processes, and people,” said Mark J. Barrenechea, OpenText CEO & CTO.
“With security risks escalating worldwide and a persistent state of ‘unprecedented’ threats, compromises are inevitable. This year’s findings reiterate the need for organizations to deploy strong multi-layered security defenses to help them remain at the heart of cyber resilience and circumvent even the most creative cybercriminals.”
Key highlights
Phishing and impersonated companies
- 770% overall phishing activity spike during the month of May 2021
- January – April 2021 saw a mere 9% of phishing activity
- 54% of all detected phishing URLs in 2021 were from top-targeted brands: Apple, Facebook, YouTube, Microsoft, and Google
- TO NOTE: eBay fell from being #1 impersonated brand in 2020, dropping out of the top 10 completely in 2021 as pandemic-related shortages eased.
Malware
- 86.3% of malware is unique to a single PC; consistent YOY
- 83% of Windows malware hides in one of four locations, noting that %appdata% saw a 46% decrease from the prior year, and %desktop% saw a 40% increase from the prior year
- TO NOTE: The number of malware files reaching Webroot-protected Windows endpoints dropped 58% between 2020 and 2021.
Infection rates by industry
- Manufacturing registered 54% above average in 2021
- Public Administration saw 41% rise above average in 2021
- Finance and Insurance were 22% below average in 2021
- TO NOTE: Manufacturing was the industry most likely to be infected in 2021 based on a willingness to pay ransoms to prevent supply chain disruptions. The 2021 Colonial Pipeline incident was reminiscent of the damage and chaos from the 2017 NotPetya ransomware by Russian nation state attackers on the Ukrainian supply chain. We expect to see more attacks targeting manufacturers and supply chains in 2022.
Infection rates by region
- Japan, United Kingdom, North America, and Australia saw infection rates drop by 51% since the year prior
- United States held the largest number of malicious IP addresses and convictions (24.3%)
- TO NOTE: Netherlands had the highest number of convictions per bad IP address (average 526), meaning that each malicious IP address in the Netherlands performed more malicious activity on average than the average malicious IP address in other countries.
“Cyber resiliency is a top proactive priority for organizations worldwide,” said Craig Robinson, IDC Program Director, Security Services. “Better understanding the known threats will play a key role in building and maintaining a strong layered security approach.”