Summary: By now, you're probably well aware of the threats that viruses, software vulnerabilities, phishing, spyware, and spam pose to your small business. Meet the newest member of the threat landscape: data breaches. It's important to recognize that no business is immune to the risk of data breaches.
Data breaches in business networks are on the rise, and the numbers will probably continue to rise due to the increasing focus by consumers, regulatory bodies and governments. Industry analyst Forrester Research calculates the direct costs of a database breach for nonfinancial companies at $15 per customer, covering customer notification and offers of credit monitoring services, IT remediation, revenue impacts from lost customers, and direct legal and audit fees. For a financial firm that issues credit cards, Forrester adds another $35 per customer, for a total of $50. Calculating total costs per incident, IT security specialist Ponemon Institute LLC estimates that each security breach incident costs $14 million. Overall, analysts estimate 2006 impacts of database breaches in 2006 at about $1 billion.
While data breaches are very costly in financial terms, they also come at a price to the business' reputation and customer confidence. According to a recent IT Policy Compliance Group report, business losses can be significant if the breach is reported. Benchmarks show businesses experiencing a publicly reported data loss expect to see an eight percent decline in customers and revenue, an eight percent decline in the price per share for publicly traded firms, and additional expenses averaging $100 per lost customer record for firms that publicly disclose data losses and thefts.
Types of breaches There are four categories that cover ways that data can become breached:
Database breaches differ in several ways from hacker attacks, viruses, worms, spam, phishing and other types of threats. Focused on information rather than infrastructure, attempts to compromise database defenses are often motivated by financial gain rather than attention. Due to the lucrative possibilities, the sophistication of database attacks is rising. Professional criminals, not amateurs, are staging the attacks, and the severity of the impact is rising.
Just as there are new attackers, there are new patterns of attack. External hacking, accidental exposure, lost or stolen backup tapes, and lost or stolen computers are still significant sources of data leakage. But database attacks are often launched with the active participation of authorized insiders who access critical data by:
There are some tried and true security solutions that help protect databases. These include:
Symantec Database Security offers new solutions designed to help your small business protect its most critical data from loss, leakage, and data fraud by:
Data breaches are becoming a high–profile element of the threat environment. Most data–centers are too complex and porous to protect critical information. That's why a data–centric approach is called for – one that examines all transmission of information for critical patterns, without compromising database, application, or network performance. Symantec Database Security reduces risk without interrupting normal operations – which can mean a huge savings for your business.
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Article Courtesy of Symantec Corporation, a partner in Security by Staples.
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