Cost of computer attacks down, says survey by CSI, FBI
But theft of unauthorized information costs companies more
July 18, 2005 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
While the cost of fending off hackers appears to be dropping for U.S. companies, attacks that involved unauthorized access to information are becoming much more costly, according to a survey by the Computer Security Institute (CSI) and the FBI.
The survey, which included about 700 respondents from government and a variety of industries, found that the average losses related to computer attacks dropped by 61% in 2004. On average, companies reported that computer and network attacks cost them $204,000 last year, down from an average of $526,000 in 2003. The report did not explain how specific factors, such as loss of employee productivity or security consultant fees, contributed to these costs.
This marks the fourth consecutive year that this number has declined, said Robert Richardson, editorial director of the CSI and a co-author of the report, which was released last week..
Part of the reason for the drop is that companies have simply become better at protecting themselves, Richardson said.
"For your run-of-the-mill virus, your average organization has that under control," he said. "There's a very fast reaction on the part of antivirus vendors, and there are automated pathways to update the virus data on enterprise networks."
However, the cost of information theft jumped considerably in 2004. "To some degree, the heat of hacker activity has moved to identity theft," Richardson said.
The survey found that the average net loss attributable to unauthorized information access jumped from more than $51,000 in 2003 to more than $300,000 last year. Attacks that resulted in the theft of proprietary information cost companies more than $355,000 on average in 2004, up from $169,000 the previous year.
The CSI's survey was done in conjunction with the San Francisco division of the FBI's Computer Intrusion Squad. It canvassed about 700 CSI members in a wide variety of industries and government organizations. The CSI is a San Francisco-based association of computer and network security professionals.
Given the demographics of the survey's participants, it's unsurprising that they're suffering less damage from attacks. "We ask people who care about security," Richardson said. "They care enough [about security] to be members of a professional organization, so my hunch is they're actually trying to get better at security."
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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