City
Epaper

An Indian firm facing 1,738 cyber attacks a week on average

By IANS | Updated: July 29, 2021 18:25 IST

New Delhi, July 29 An organisation in India faced cyber attack 1,738 times on average per week in ...

Open in App

New Delhi, July 29 An organisation in India faced cyber attack 1,738 times on average per week in the last six months compared to 757 attacks per organisation globally, a report showed on Thursday.

The most impacted industries in India in the last six months were education/research, government/military, insurance/legal, manufacturing and healthcare, according to the report by Check Point Research (CPR), the Threat Intelligence arm of Check Point Software Technologies.

Cyber criminals have continued to exploit the Covid-19 pandemic and highlights a dramatic 93 per cent increase in the number of ransomware attacks globally, said the ‘Cyber Attack Trends: 2021 Mid-Year Report'.

At 1,338, organisations in the APAC region faced the highest number of cyber-attacks weekly, followed by EMEA at 777 and Americas at 688.

"In the first half of 2021, cyber criminals have continued to adapt their working practices in order to exploit the shift to hybrid working, targeting organizations' supply chains and network links to partners in order to achieve maximum disruption," said Maya Horowitz, VP Research at Check Point Software.

"This year cyber-attacks have continued to break records and we have even seen a huge increase in the number of ransomware attacks, with high-profile incidents such as Solarwinds, Colonial Pipeline, JBS or Kayesa," he added.

The report forecast that in the second half of 2021, ransomware will grow, despite law enforcement stepping up.

"Ransomware attacks will continue to proliferate despite increased investment from governments and law enforcement, especially as the Joe Biden Administration makes this a priority," the report mentioned.

The growing trends of triple extortion, supply chain attacks and even just remote cyber-attacks may affect businesses more than ever.

"The triple extortion trend in ransomware now includes not only the original target organization, but also its customers, partners and vendors. This multiplies the actual victims of each attack and requires a special security strategy," the report mentioned.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Maya horowitzindiaNew DelhiApacCheck Point ResearchThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-westIndiUk-indiaRepublic of indiaIndia india
Open in App

Related Stories

CricketIndia vs South Africa 2025 Schedule: Full List of Matches, Dates, Venues and Fixtures

TechnologyOpenAI Offers ChatGPT Go Free for a Year in India; Check All the Features Users Can Now Access

NationalGolden Power: Indian Women Now Hold 24,000 Tonnes of Gold, Outshining Global Investors

MumbaiMumbai Man Pursuing PhD in US Booked for Sexually Abusing Woman on False Promise of Marriage

LifestyleCreative Rangoli Designs for Dhanteras and Diwali 2025 to Welcome Goddess Lakshmi

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyGold breaks weekly losing streak but falls after US govt shutdown ends

TechnologyCentre launches 10 new AMRIT pharmacies

TechnologyRight time for making ships together to meet global demand: Puri tells S. Korean firms

TechnologyVenezuela eyes cooperation in critical minerals, attract Indian investment: Govt

TechnologyOffice leasing, premium housing drive real estate sentiment in India