About nine out of 10 breaches were financially motivated, based
on an examination of more than 32,000 incidents and nearly 4,000
confirmed break-ins in 81 countries, the report said.
Verizon Business 2020 Data Breach Investigations Report found
that confirmed data breaches doubled from the prior year. As the
coronavirus pandemic has forced people indoors, cyber attacks on
businesses are expected to climb.
The report found that 86% of breaches were for money, not for
purposes of spying. Credential theft, phishing and compromising
business emails caused 67% of the cyber attacks.
As more businesses moved to web-based solutions, so did hackers.
According to the report, breaches on web and cloud applications
rose to 43%, double the previous year.
Companies like Facebook Inc <FB.O> and Salesforce <CRM.N> have
extended working remotely to at least the rest of the year, with
more businesses expected to follow suit. Verizon Business Group
CEO Tami Erwin said the "digital transformation" to the
work-from-home model during the coronavirus pandemic has
presented a number of security red flags.
"A lot of people ended up sending workers to work from home
without really thinking through what were some of the security
elements in the future," Erwin told Reuters. "I think employees
working from home are probably more vulnerable to attacks."
Erwin said businesses can protect themselves from cyber attacks
by keeping employees educated on phishing and other fraudulent
tactics to access sensitive information.
(Reporting by Arriana McLymore; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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