“Not only are there more ransomware threats than ever, but the criminals are more ruthless. They will iterate threats and wait patiently in order to extract maximum damage,” said Shishir Singh, executive vice president and CTO for cybersecurity at BlackBerry.
“For uninsured and underinsured organizations, this potentially puts them in extreme jeopardy. The cyber underground is increasingly sharing learnings and partnering to make threats as efficient as possible. It’s vital businesses strengthen their security posture against these threats by supplementing insurance with a prevention-first software approach that lowers their overall risk.”
The survey questioned 450 managers who make business decisions for IT or security solutions at their organizations. Interestingly, 60 per cent of respondents said they would be hesitant to enter a new business agreement with any organization lacking cyber insurance. Cost is a major factor in cyber insurance decisions, the survey suggests. Fifty-seven per cent of respondents said the current cost of premiums is a challenge. followed by lack of transparency from insurance companies about what will be covered (49 per cent). A predominant reason for business underinsurance was a lack of compliance with cybersecurity software requirements of insurers. One-third of respondents said their organization had previously been denied insurance coverage because it didn’t meet specific requirements for having endpoint detection and response (EDR) technology. Other experts have noted insurers also may demand customers have multi-factor authentication for logins, and off-site or cloud data backup.“Though it might sound counterintuitive, continuing to adhere to software requirements is one of the best ways to fight the ransomware industry,” said Vincent Weafer, chief technology officer at Corvus Insurance. “In our portfolio alone, we’ve seen a 50 percent reduction in the ratio of ransom demands that end up being paid. Better software adoption is a critical element in better positioning organizations to stand up to attackers.”
For more on the survey see this BlackBerry blog. The post Many North American firms have no cyber insurance coverage: Survey first appeared on IT World Canada.