8 Worrying Cybersecurity Statistics You Need to Know in 2024 – Tech.co

The year 2023 was littered with cyber attacks, data breaches, and other online criminal activity targeting both businesses and consumers. Unfortunately, there’s no reason to believe 2024 will be any different. Now more than ever, businesses have to be on their guard to defend against the latest cybersecuruity threats.
According to Tech.co’s Impact of Technology on the Workplace report, employees are the weak point when it comes to business security, with phishing attacks and employee errors among the top causes of data breaches in 2023..
Despite these worrying trends, the report found that the vast majority of businesses aren’t using key cybersecurity tools. In this article, we’ll go through the need-to-know cybersecurity statistics for 2024, including more of Tech.co’s original findings.
Want to learn even more? You download our full report for free and read it at your leisure.
All statistics sourced from Tech.co’s Impact of Technology on the Workplace Report 2024.
In the rest of this page, which centers around statistics drawn from our report, we cover:

Here, we’ll go through some of the top cybersecurity statistics that we gleaned from our survey data, specifically concerning the prevalence of data breaches.
According to the business leaders that told Tech.co their company had experienced a data breach in 2023, 23% said that a phishing attack was to blame, while 12% put it down to employee errors, such as sending information to the wrong email address. A further 22% determined the source to be a computer virus such as ransomware. 
Figures for options like this – which involve some human engagement – were significantly higher than sources such as unsecured Wi-Fi (8%) and Advanced Persistent Threats (9%). This suggests that businesses should treat training and educating staff as pivotal to their cybersecurity strategy as software is. 
One of the more concerning cybersecurity statistics from Tech.co’s annual report is that more than 1 in 10 business leaders (11%) were unsure if they’d suffered a data breach in 2023.
Better visibility, then, is needed for those in leadership positions. Data breach recovery and damage limitation often require an all-hands-on-deck approach, so it’s strange to see that a significant proportion of executives aren’t clued in.
A rare pleasant surprise from our findings is that 78% of the businesses that responded to our survey didn’t experience a data breach in 2023.
While data breaches are a common and ever-present threat to any businesses that store sensitive information about their employees, clients and customers online, if you implement the right steps to secure it, you’ll greatly reduce your risk of becoming a target.
That said, the fact that 22% of businesses did suffer a breach is plenty alarming. It means your organization’s odds of suffering a breach are nearly 1 in 4, further underlining the importance of having a robust cybersecurity strategy complete with the right tools.
Interestingly, when you employ your 25th employee, your chance of being affected by a data breach almost triples, while companies with more than 50 people on their payroll are even more likely to be compromised by cybercriminals.

40% of business leaders think cybersecurity threats will “highly affect” their organization’s performance this year. This was higher than the percentage of businesses that said 5G (36%) and remote collaboration technology (38%) would “highly affect” their business.
Additionally, almost a third (28%) of the respondents we spoke to said it would moderately impact their business operations in 2024, while only 13% thought the impact would be “very low”.

Along with some questions about data breaches, we also asked businesses that participated in our survey some questions about the cybersecurity tools they’re using. According to IBM, the cost of an average data breach in 2023 was $4.45 million, so it’s paramount that companies of all sizes invest in the cybersecurity software needed to secure their networks. 
Did you think all businesses were using secure VPNs? Well, think again – 59% of respondents to our 2024 Impact of Technology on the Workplace survey said they don’t use a VPN
This is particularly concerning when read alongside the fact that 15% of the data breaches respondents told us about originated from unsecured Wi-Fi networks (8%) or supposedly encrypted data being intercepted (7%) – two risks VPNs help to mitigate thanks to their ultra-secure serves and IP-masking capabilities. 
Similarly, almost two-thirds (66%) of respondents said they weren’t using password managers. This may indicate that a passwordless society – one where passkeys rule supreme – might be ushered in quicker than we think. 
Could password managers and VPNs simply be too old school? While user rates among our cohort of survey respondents were surprisingly low, 19.5% said they were using artificial intelligence as part of their cybersecurity strategy.
Cybersecurity was a more popular use case for AI than financial and legal analysis, both of which were discussed widely in 2023 in the context of roles most at risk of being subsumed by artificial intelligence.

More than one in ten senior leadership professionals we spoke to aren’t confident in their organization’s ability to defend and respond to a data breach (11%), while a further %15 said they were “not sure” whether their company could withstand a cyberattack of this kind.
That’s a concerning total of 26% of businesses with significant work to do to get themselves up to speed in the new year.

While brushing up on cybersecurity statistics can stir one to attention, preventing cyberattacks rests in two lines of action: firstly, ensuring you have installed the right cybersecurity software, and secondly, ensuring your staff team is given sufficient cybersecurity training so that they can recognize malicious correspondence such as phishing emails and understand the reasons why specific measures and processes have to be followed.
For example, no business should be operating online without a firewall, and for many, a business VPN like NordLayer will be one of the best ways to ensure remote access to your company resources is watertight. Antivirus software with ransomware protection included should also be a top consideration for businesses.
But that’ll all be for nothing if employees at your business can’t recognize a suspicious-looking phishing email, and hand authentication credentials over to a hacker. And, if they’re re-using that username and password across their work apps, there’s no telling how much access that could open up an intrusion – basic passwords are notoriously easy to crack.
So, along with investing in reliable cybersecurity software, extensive cybersecurity training, as well as the stringent enforcement of company cybersecurity policy, is just as crucial to keeping your business safe. Keeping up with the latest cybersecurity news and product updates is also strongly advised.
Verifying
Get the latest tech news, straight to your inbox
Stay informed on the top business tech stories with Tech.co's weekly highlights reel.
By signing up to receive our newsletter, you agree to our Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe at any time.
We’re sorry this article didn’t help you today – we welcome feedback, so if there’s any way you feel we could improve our content, please email us at contact@tech.co
Fed up with the rush hour commute? Want to work on your own…
The video game industry is already suffered record-setting…
Your LinkedIn is probably due an upgrade. Fly above the…
Walmart isn’t all cut-price TVs, it’s a $472bn global…

source

Related Posts

After 6 months and little explanation, Norton Healthcare patients, employees still feeling effects of cyber attack – WDRB

Spotty shower possible. Storms after midnight Updated: April 16, 2024 @ 12:31 pmNorton Healthcare, a company serving about 600,000 patients a year with nearly $5 billion in assets, continues to…

Read more

CA's top cybersecurity job has been vacant for almost 2 years – CalMatters

Technology Californians get hacked all the time. The state’s top cybersecurity job is vacant In summaryGov. Newsom has yet to appoint a commander who is tasked with informing businesses and…

Read more

13 Cyber Security Measures Your Small Business Must Take – Tech.co

Our content is funded in part by commercial partnerships, at no extra cost to you and without impact to our editorial impartiality. Click to Learn MoreCybersecurity has been important to…

Read more

AVG Antivirus Free review – Ghacks

AVG AntiVirus Free is a longstanding security program for Microsoft Windows that protects computer systems from viruses, trojans and other malicious code.One interesting fact about AVG is that it maintains…

Read more

Vlog Episode #247: Chris Long on Improving Technical SEO Skills & Playing Offense SEO – Search Engine Roundtable

In part one, we learned about Chris Long and his experience working with Bill Slawski. Then, in part two, we spoke about helping people with SEO on LinkedIn and using…

Read more

Information Security Vs. Cybersecurity: What's The Difference? – Forbes

Information Security Vs. Cybersecurity: What’s The Difference?  Forbessource

Read more

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *