Sophos released additional findings from its annual "
State of Ransomware 2024"
survey. According to the report, among organizations surveyed, 97% of
those hit by ransomware over the past year engaged with law enforcement
and/or official government bodies for help with the attack.
In
addition, more than half (59%) of those organizations that did engage
with law enforcement found the process easy or somewhat easy. Only 10%
of those surveyed said the process was very difficult.
Based on
the survey, impacted organizations reached out to law enforcement and/or
official government bodies for a range of assistance with ransomware
attacks. Sixty-one percent reported they had received advice on dealing
with ransomware, while 60% received help investigating the attack.
Fifty-eight percent of those that had their data encrypted received help
from law enforcement to recover their data from the ransomware attack.
"Companies
have traditionally shied away from engaging with law enforcement for
fear of their attack becoming public. If they are known to have been
victimized it could impact their business reputation and make a bad
situation worse. Victim shaming has long been a consequence of an
attack, but we've made progress on that front, both within the security
community and at the government level. New regulations on cyber incident reporting,
for example, appear to have normalized engaging with law enforcement,
and this survey data shows organizations are taking steps in the right
direction," said Chester Wisniewski, director, Field CTO, Sophos. "If
the public and the private sectors can continue to galvanize as a group
effort to help businesses, we can continue to improve our ability to
recover quickly and gather intelligence to protect others or even
potentially hold those conducting these attacks responsible."
Recent in-the-field findings from Sophos X-Ops' Active Adversary report
highlighted the continued threat of ransomware to small-and-medium
sized businesses. Data from more than 150 incident response (IR) cases
in 2023 found that ransomware was, for the fourth year running, the most
frequently encountered attack type, occurring in 70% of IR cases Sophos
X-Ops investigated.
"While improving cooperation and working with
law enforcement after an attack are all good developments, we need to
move from simply treating the symptoms of ransomware to preventing those
attacks in the first place. Our most recent Active Adversary report
showed that many organizations are still failing to implement key
security measures that can demonstrably reduce their overall risk
profile; this includes patching their devices in a timely manner and
enabling multi-factor authentication. From the law enforcement side,
while they have had some recent successes with takedowns and arrests
from LockBit to Qakbot, these successes have proven to be more akin to temporary disruptions than longer term or permanent wins.
"Criminals
are successful in part due to the scale and efficiency with which they
operate. To beat them back, we need to match them in both these areas.
That means that, going forward, we need even greater collaboration, both
within the private and public sector-and we need it at a global level,"
said Wisniewski.
"Today's threat environment is constantly
evolving-and it's more severe and more complex than ever before. The bad
guys aren't constrained by international borders, so we shouldn't be,
either.
"At the Bureau, we've been doubling down in
particular on our work with the private sector, in their capacity as
victims of cyberattacks, of course, because the mission of the FBI
always has been-and always will be-victim-centric-but also as integral
partners, who can share valuable information about threats and trends,
and, increasingly, join in our operations themselves," said Christopher Wray, FBI Director.
Data
for the State of Ransomware 2024 report comes from a vendor-agnostic
survey of 5,000 cybersecurity/IT leaders conducted between January and
February 2024. Respondents were based in 14 countries across the
Americas, EMEA and Asia Pacific. Organizations surveyed had between 100
and 5,000 employees, and revenue ranged from less than $10 million to
more than $5 billion.
Read the full State of Ransomware 2024 report on Sophos.com for additional global findings and data by sector.