Crime continues to forge new paths into business. Regulatory compliance adds stress and burden to responsible organizations. The increasingly complicated landscape challenges the balance between resources and growth. The use of technology and digitization has escalated have escalated cyberattacks in India, and nearly 70 per cent of Nifty 50 companies are vulnerable to hackers, reveals a PwC survey.
According to Times of India 50 companies studied, 34 (or 68 per cent) had identified vulnerabilities in at least one or more of their Internet-facing properties.
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PwC survey about transgressions in Indian cyberspace of these companies further said, 525 email addresses belonging to the 34 companies were compromised, meaning hackers had access to those email addresses.
Sivarama Krishnan, Leader, Cyber Security – PwC India said, “Cybersecurity is no more restricted to Chief Information Officers (CIOs) or Chief Security Officers (CSOs) but needs serious attention of the higher management.”
200 IP addresses belonging to the 34 companies were blacklisted by various ISPs, implying that the ISPs found these IPs to be involved in spreading malicious traffic on the Internet, sending spam emails, or acting as a botnet in large cyber attacks, the report noted.
Asam Malik, cyber security director, PwC in Manchester, believes that ,“Hackers are now more ambitious than ever. Their aim goes beyond targeting financial information to include a company’s ‘crown jewels’ – customer data and intellectual property information, the loss of which, can bring down an entire business.
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“The threat of cybercrime is now a board level risk issue, but not enough UK companies treat it that way.”
According to the report, transgressions in Indian cyberspace have more than doubled over the past year to 6,284 incidents per respondent. The average number of attacks in India is fast catching up with the global average of 6,853 incidents per respondent
“There is a perceptible shift in the way modern threats are carried out and the types of responses needed and the surge in cyber crimes manifests how these attackers are extensively-equipped with resources besides having a high technical skill set,” he added.
Sector wise, media & entertainment, automobiles, consumer goods and energy had the highest number of vulnerabilities.
“Hackers today are just not the tech enthusiasts but are more sophisticated and organised in their approach to probe their targets and companies need to, more than ever before, adopt sophisticated security analytical tools to prevent such crimes,” Krishnan said.