Holiday and Weekend Ransomware Attacks More Costly
November 16, 2022
Cybereason
published results from a global study of organizations that had suffered a
ransomware attack on a holiday or weekend. The study highlights an ongoing
disconnect between the increased risk organizations face from ransomware attacks
that occur on holidays and weekends and their readiness to handle them, as
year-over-year, ransomware attacks during these times take longer to assess and
resolve.
The higher assessment and remediation times stem from the fact that 44 % of
companies reduce security staffing on holidays and weekends by as much as 70 %
from weekday levels. Shockingly, 20 % of companies cut security staffing by 90 %
from weekday levels. Conversely, only 7% of companies are at least 80 % staffed
on holidays and weekends.
Titled Organizations at Risk: Ransomware Attackers Don’t Take Holidays, the
study of 1,203 cybersecurity professionals found that holiday and weekend
ransomware attacks result in greater revenue losses than ransomware attacks on
weekdays. One-third of respondents said their organization lost more money from
a holiday/weekend ransomware attack, up from 13% of respondents in the 2021
study. In the education and transportation industries, the number of respondents
reporting higher revenue losses jumped to 43% and 48%, respectively.
“Ransomware actors tend to strike on holidays and weekends because they know
companies’ human defenses often aren’t as robust at those times. It allows them
to evade detection, do more damage, and steal more data as security teams
scramble to mobilize a response. Cybereason found that risk assessment is
slower, it takes companies longer to assemble the team to fight the initial
attack, which leads to slower remediation and recovery times,” said Lior Div,
Cybereason CEO and Co-founder.
Financial losses aren’t the only thing businesses are concerned with when it
comes to holiday and weekend ransomware attacks. In fact, ransomware attacks
disrupt the lives of the security professionals defending businesses with 88
percent of respondents missing a holiday or weekend celebration due to a
ransomware attack. These numbers were higher in the financial services industry,
where more than 90% of respondents said they had missed out on time with family.
“Disrupting
cybersecurity professionals’ well-earned downtime and interfering with their
personal lives takes a toll on their well being, leads to burnout and causes
some people to leave the field altogether. The overall success cyber criminals
have attacking on holidays and weekends leads to them more aggressively
targeting companies during these times as a way to further fuel their criminal
empires,” added Div.
Ransomware is preventable and many companies offer endpoint detection & response
technologies that will stop the scourge. Implementing a security awareness
program for employees, assuring operating systems and other software are
regularly updated and patched is a step in the right direction. In addition,
ensure clear isolation practices are in place to stop any further ingress on the
network or spreading of the ransomware to other devices. And evaluate
locking-down of critical accounts when possible. The path attackers often take
in propagating ransomware across a network is to escalate privileges to the
admin domain-level and then deploy the ransomware.