Small Businesses Are Cybercrime Targets

  /     /     /  
Publicated : 22/11/2024   Category : security


Small Businesses Are Cybercrime Targets


Hackers arent just after the big fish – theyre coming after small businesses, as well.



One of the biggest myths about cyber attacks is that they only happen to large companies. Sure, larger organizations get more than their fair share of headlines. Whether its stolen user data, ransomware shutdowns, or DDoS attacks that cut off access to some of the Internets most popular sites, larger organizations inability to respond to cyber threats is big news.
But small and midsized businesses (SMBs) are actually attacked more often. SMBs made up 61% of cyber attack victims last year, according to the
Verizon 2017 Data Breach report
. More than a third of SMBs were
victims of ransomware last year
. By every estimation, SMBs are under fire. Any notion that they somehow fly under the radar, never attracting hackers attention, is plain false.
Hackers couldnt care less how many employees an organization has. They care about what they can achieve with an attack. SMBs fall into hackers crosshairs due to a combination of factors. First, many small businesses have more valuable assets than they might think. Second, theyre often sitting ducks. Theyre lucky to have a single person working on IT, and sometimes the CEO couldnt even tell you who it is. An easy-to-crack, high-value target is exactly what hackers are looking for.
Take a car dealership, for example. While it might only have a couple dozen employees -- salespeople, vehicle technicians, maybe an IT administrator -- it can have terabytes of valuable personally identifiable information.
Every person who has financed a car through the dealership had to provide personal financial information like annual wages, social security number, credit history, and bank account information. For anyone servicing their car at the dealership, the repair records and values of all their vehicles are on file.
Just last year, social security numbers, names and addresses, phone numbers, payroll information, and other data was leaked online after
hackers stole more than three years of records
from a database system used by 128 car dealerships throughout the country. Dealerships backed up their data to these centralized systems without encryption or security, allowing anyone to see the information.
Lasting damage
The damage of such a breach can be lasting. A survey last year showed that 84% of consumers
wouldnt buy another car
from a dealership that compromised their personal data.
We could continue to pick on auto dealerships, but the reality is that most SMBs today deal with sensitive data in one form or another. Few take precautions to secure that data.
Some are more focused on maintaining or growing their business, and others look at extensive security as an unnecessary expense they can trim out of the budget. Some dont even know where to start when looking for the kinds of solutions that would lock down their valuable data and block hackers from ever touching it.
For SMBs with limited or non-existent IT staffs and smaller budgets, one of the easiest solutions is to work with an existing partner. One of the most obvious is their Internet provider. We recently surveyed businesses and, when asked how they planned to defend themselves, nearly a third -- 32% -- said they
wanted their carrier to offer a service
that would protect them.
This is a boon to the SMBs, who would get the protection they need without needing an enterprises resources, but also for the carriers, who have been fighting to grow a business that has largely plateaued.
More carriers are beginning to offer managed security services to their customers, guarding against massive DDoS attacks driven by IoT botnets and increasingly popular encrypted attacks. Those services, from a trusted partner, can keep SMBs security up to date and ahead of hackers as attacks continue to grow in sophistication.
Selling a lie
Any SMB that thinks itll just fly under the radar is selling itself a lie. Hackers are relentless at sniffing out vulnerabilities, and any gaps in security will quickly be uncovered and exploited. Carriers are offering a convenient way for SMBs to protect themselves, get on a steady security footing, and show customers that their data is valued as much as their business.
Related posts:
Wearables Bring Privacy & Security Headaches to the Enterprise
DDoS Attacks Trend in a Bad Direction
Should Security Silos Still Stand?

Mike O’Malley is the Vice President of Carrier Strategy and Business Development for Radware.

Last News

▸ SMBs can enhance security via Cloud in 4 ways. ◂
Discovered: 26/12/2024
Category: security

▸ Google and Facebook reassure U.K.: No snooping. ◂
Discovered: 26/12/2024
Category: security

▸ New startup offers human verification process. ◂
Discovered: 26/12/2024
Category: security


Cyber Security Categories
Google Dorks Database
Exploits Vulnerability
Exploit Shellcodes

CVE List
Tools/Apps
News/Aarticles

Phishing Database
Deepfake Detection
Trends/Statistics & Live Infos



Tags:
Small Businesses Are Cybercrime Targets