A new report issued by Datamonitor found that although 69 percent of companies do not feel that they are at risk of being the victim of a specific and targeted attack, more than 77 percent reported that they had fallen victim to a worm or a virus. Only 18 percent of those surveyed reported no security breach at all.. . .. A new report issued by Datamonitor found that although 69 percent of companies do not feel that they are at risk of being the victim of a specific and targeted attack, more than 77 percent reported that they had fallen victim to a worm or a virus. Only 18 percent of those surveyed reported no security breach at all. The report, which was commissioned by software giant Computer Associates, surveyed 55 global companies across all industry sectors, to examine the frequency and impact of various types of attacks, including malicious code. "There's a real element of complacency at present," said Simon Perry, vice president of security strategy at Computer Associates. "Businesses feel that attacks are someone else's problem, and therefore if they're not a specific target for hackers, they'll be OK." However, Perry went on to point out that many businesses are suffering "collateral damage," being affected indiscriminately by viruses and worms that have no particular target in mind. The link for this article located at ElectronicNews.net is no longer available. . An emerging study underscores indifference in digital safety, demonstrating how numerous organizations miscalculate online threats even in light of incidents.. IT Security Complacency, Cyber Risks, Company Breaches, Malicious Code. . Anthony Pell
This week marks the first anniversary of the Nimda virus attack, an event that may have driven more corporate IT security changes during the past 12 months than the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks did. . .. This week marks the first anniversary of the Nimda virus attack, an event that may have driven more corporate IT security changes during the past 12 months than the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks did . Nimda first surfaced on Sept. 18 last year and was among the first major viruses to target both servers and client computers. It combined features from previous threats and propagated not just via e-mail attachments, but also through shared files on servers. It also exploited Web pages containing Java scripts. "Nimda heightened awareness, unfortunately at a very high cost," said Kim Milford, information security manager at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. For example, the virus showed that "filtering at the e-mail gateway or on the desktop alone wasn't the Holy Grail that we security folks are always seeking," Milford said. The link for this article located at IDG is no longer available. . Contemplating the aftermath of the WannaCry ransomware incident, which prompted significant shifts in cybersecurity protocols over the last twelve months.. Nimda Virus, Cybersecurity Threat, IT Security Transformation, Malware Awareness. . Anthony Pell
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