Tag Archive for: forking

APAC organisations forking out millions due to ransomware


Ransomware has had a widespread impact on organisations in the Asia Pacific region in numerous ways, including both financially and legally.

This is according to Claroty’s report titled ‘Global State of Industrial Cybersecurity 2021: Resilience Amid Disruption’, which revealed the impact of ransomware on organisations during 2021.

An independent survey of 1,100 full-time IT and OT security professionals was carried out in the United States, Europe and Asia Pacific, to determine how organisations dealt with ransomware challenges in 2021 and their levels of resiliency and priorities moving forward.

The report found that 80% of organisations in APAC were affected by ransomware attacks and just over half (51%) paid the ransom.

Overall, 71% of organisations in APAC paid ransom fees of US$100K-1M, and 13% paid US$1-5M. Moreover, 52% of APAC organisations reported a downtime event would cost them up to US$0.5M per hour in lost revenue, with 36% reporting costs would be even higher per hour at US$0.5-5M.

Globally, 9% of organisations said costs would exceed US$5M per hour. Only 5% of APAC companies would face such high costs.

The survey also explored the legal requirement to report ransomware payments, with only 45% in APAC supporting a legal requirement to report ransomware payments, so long as this came with a requirement to also report payments to regulators or other authorities.

On the contrary, 23% in APAC supported ransomware payments being legally required, but with no obligation to report payment.

However, the report notes: “As long as the financial model continues to favour paying the ransom, these threats will continue. The only way to mitigate the risk is to understand how to make hyperconnectivity more secure. Gaps in processes and technology, some that have existed for years, must be addressed.”

On this front, the survey revealed an almost universally increased investment in cybersecurity, and a strengthening of cybersecurity measures over the past two years driven by the pandemic and by high-profile, and highly damaging, ransomware attacks in 2021: on Colonial Pipeline and global meat processor JBS, as well as the SolarWinds supply chain attack.

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Breaking the Internet and forking WebKit: 13 stories you may have missed

This week was all about the Web. Well, ok, it was about a lot of other things too. Things like the four-year-old supercomputer that is now totally obsolete, the strategies proposed for coping with climate change, and the complete meltdown of Prenda Law’s fifth-pleading coterie. Check out the headlines below to see if you missed anything!

  • Can a DDoS break the Internet? Sure… just not all of it
    Last week’s DDoS attack caused big problems for some, went unnoticed by others.
  • Google going its own way, forking WebKit rendering engine
    Claims that new “Blink” engine will allow faster innovation for all WebKit users.
  • World’s top supercomputer from ‘09 is now obsolete, will be dismantled
    IBM Roadrunner, the first petaflop machine, goes offline today.
  • Climate change may be irreversible, but we control the future trajectory
    A Perspective in Science says we have more control over our future than we think.
  • Zynga launches real-money online gambling, stock price surges
    While UK-only for now, poker and other casino games could come to US this year.
  • Unless Apple changes its rules, Facebook won’t have a Home on iOS
    Apple’s requirements for third-party apps will keep Facebook in its sandbox.
  • Judge smash: Prenda’s porn-trolling days are over
    Prenda lawyers take the Fifth. And a federal judge will assume the worst.
  • “I was an iPad skeptic”
    Ars staff reflects on three years of tablets post-iPad. “I could live without it, but I’d rather not.”
  • Ars Q&A: Prenda Law’s Paul Hansmeier speaks—just not about copyright
    Hansmeier happily talks class action objectors, declines comment at least five times.
  • From touch displays to the Surface: A brief history of touchscreen technology
    The beginnings of capacitive, resisitive, and multitouch screens.
  • Looking back at our favorite LucasArts gaming classics
    Ars fondly recalls some favorites—Star Wars to pipe—from the defunct studio.
  • New phones from Samsung, HTC to support “Facebook Home” app family
    A flagship Facebook phone will come with the apps preinstalled.
  • LG Optimus G Pro Review: the phone-tablets are here to stay
    It’s bigger and faster and, in a lot of ways, better.

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