The New Cyber Threats: What Every Business Must Know Now
Download MP3π Episode Description:
- Unlike traditional business risks (like fire, theft, or personal injury), cyber risks are constantly evolving β often changing weekly or monthly.
- Cybersecurity threats such as phishing and ransomware are rapidly increasing in frequency and complexity.
- Phishing is a form of cybercrime that uses social engineering and technical tricks to steal identities and financial information.
- Attackers often impersonate executives, accountants, or attorneys to trick employees into giving access to login credentials or sensitive systems.
- Once inside, attackers may launch ransomware attacks or lock down your system entirely.
- Phishing attacks nearly doubled from April 2021 to March 2022 β from 200,000 to almost 400,000.
- For the first time ever, over 1 million phishing attacks were recorded in a single quarter.
- While ransomware attacks have declined in some sectors, financial services and phishing incidents remain high.
- Emerging threats vary by industry β social media, e-commerce, webmail, crypto, and logistics are all heavily targeted.
- Ransomware is especially high in manufacturing, making up 25% of attacks.
- Staying updated on current and future cyber risks is essential.
- Cybersecurity strategies must be dynamic β not static β and should evolve alongside new threats.
- Cyber insurance carriers that serve multiple industries can provide valuable insight and updates about the latest trends and attacks.
- Good cyber insurance partners will notify you of vulnerabilities β like new routers being targeted β so you can take preventive action.
- Attackers often use common domain registrars like Namecheap, GoDaddy, and Google to make phishing sites look legitimate.
- Knowing where a domain is registered can help identify possible threats β though itβs not foolproof.
- For best results, consider outsourcing cybersecurity monitoring to a trusted I.T. provider or ensure your internal team is up to date.
