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Most manufacturing firms hit by ransomware refuse to pay attackers — Sophos survey

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Companies in the manufacturing sector are the least (19%) likely to submit to a ransom demand when hit by ransomware. This is among the findings of Sophos’ “The State of Ransomware in Manufacturing and Production 2021” survey.

“The State of Ransomware in Manufacturing and Production 2021 survey” polled 5,400 people working in a leadership role in information technology (IT), including 438 in manufacturing and production companies, in 30 countries across Europe, the Americas, Asia-Pacific, and Central Asia, the Middle East, and Africa.

The cybersecurity company’s survey found that the manufacturing companies are able to restore (68%) encrypted data, which could explain their will to refuse the demand for ransom.

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“The sector’s high ability to restore data from backups enables many companies to refuse attacker demands for payment in the case of traditional, encryption-based ransomware attacks,” said Chester Wisniewski, principal research scientist at Sophos. “However, it also means that adversaries are forced to find other approaches to make money from victims, such as stealing data and threatening to leak company information if their financial demands aren’t met.

Extortion

The Sophos survey that 36% of the businesses surveyed were hit by ransomware in 2020 and that 9% of ransomware victims were hit with extortion-based ransomware attacks, compared to a global average of 7%. The average ransomware recovery cost was $1.52 million, less than the global average of $1.85 million, according to Sophos.

The findings also show that manufacturing and production companies worry more than any other sector about being attacked with ransomware in the future. Sixty percent (60%) of respondents said this is because attacks are so sophisticated, they have become harder to stop. Forty-six percent (46%) believe that since ransomware is so prevalent, it is inevitable they’ll get hit by cybercrime.

Sophos experts recommend the following best practices for all organizations across all sectors:

” Backups are vital, but they cannot protect against this risk, so manufacturing and production businesses should not rely on them as an anti-extortion defense,” Wisniewski said. “Organizations need to extend their anti-ransomware defenses by combining technology with human-led threat hunting to neutralize today’s advanced human-led cyberattacks.”

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