http://www.informationweek.com/news/security/attacks/231300047 By Mathew J. Schwartz InformationWeek August 02, 2011 Over the past year, the median cost of cybercrime increased by 56%, and now costs companies an average of $6 million per year. That finding comes from Ponemon Institute, which on Tuesday released its Second Annual Cost of Cyber Crime Study, sponsored by HP ArcSight. For the study, Ponemon questioned 50 U.S.-based businesses, ranging in size from 700 to 139,000 employees, about "the direct, indirect, and opportunity costs that resulted from the loss or theft of information, disruption to business operations, revenue loss, and destruction of property, plant, and equipment." Ponemon found that from 2010 to 2011, the time and cost required to respond to security breaches has been increasing. Notably, the time organizations required to respond to a successful attack increased from 14 days last year to 18 days this year. Over the same period, the average daily cost of attacks increased from $17,600 to nearly $23,000. In addition, the study found that organizations experienced an average of "72 discernible and successful cyber attacks per week," which is an increase of 44% from the previous year. Of the resulting costs incurred by organizations, the largest was information loss (accounting for 40% of the total cost), followed by business disruption (28%), revenue loss (18%), and equipment damage (9%). [...] ___________________________________________________________ Attend Black Hat USA 2011, hosted at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada July 30-Aug 4, offering over 60 training sessions and 9 tracks of Briefings from security industry elite. To sign up visit: http://www.blackhat.comReceived on Wed Aug 03 2011 - 02:47:41 PDT
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