Australian organisations have reported the highest rate of data breaches compared with global markets in 2023, according to a new survey. However, they were less likely than their global peers to experience a “significant” cyber attack.
Australia’s quicker adoption of technologies, including cloud computing, is part of the story, according to backup and recovery firm Rubrik. The company has urged Australian organisations to review their backups to improve cyber resilience.
The State of Data Security: Measuring Your Data’s Risk report, based on a survey of 1,600 global IT and security leaders as well as telemetry data from 6,100 Rubrik customers, gauged the frequency of cyber incidents related to business email compromises, data breaches, ransomware attacks, insider incidents and inadvertent data exposure.
The report found that the data-breach rate among Australian companies was 50% higher than the global average. Additional findings showed that:
Antoine Le Tard, vice president – Asia-Pacific and Japan at Rubrik, said the report’s results showed Australia was a favorite target for cyber attackers partly because the country “is a mature market and early adopter of cloud and enterprise security technologies.”
“As such, local organisations have been investing heavily in perimeter security for the past decade, yet Australia holds the unenviable title of leading the world in data breaches,” he said.
Cloud environments were the most targeted environment in Australia, though attacks were witnessed across various infrastructures due to the widespread uptake of hybrid environments in Australia.
According to the Rubrik report, in Australia:
Globally, Rubrik found most cloud tenants were targeted and two out of three were compromised:
Rubrik’s cloud findings were supported by research from cyber security company Proofpoint, which found that 94% of cloud tenants were targeted every month last year and 62% of targeted cloud tenants were compromised.
Rubrik said the cloud comes with inherent risk — particularly with vulnerable sensitive data — even though it is a powerful business enabler. The firm identified three security blind spots in the cloud:
While data breaches were the most common attack type experienced in Australia, ransomware accounted for more than a third — or 36% — of local cyber incidents, compared with 33% globally.
Rubrik noted that Australian organisations were particularly inclined to pay ransoms to cyber criminals. In fact, 97% of enterprises reported paying a ransom to recover data or stop an attack.
The report also showed that:
Recorded Future tracked 4,399 publicly reported ransomware attacks across all industries with its ransomware tracker last year — an increase of 70% year over year. Le Tard said the high percentage of businesses paying a ransom following an encryption event suggested many Australian organisations are placing too much faith in perimeter defences.
“They simply aren’t prepared to recover their own data following a successful attack,” he explained.
Rubrik says that the prevalence of attacks should push Australian organisations to strongly consider cyber resilience strategies — focused on business continuity and recovery after cyber attacks — and prevention. According to Rubrik’s report, in Australia:
Le Tard explained that “a comprehensive backup strategy is the best defence” to ransomware attacks.
“It allows the victim to rapidly recover their own data without having to pay the attackers,” he said. “But investing here often requires an organisation to accept breaches are inevitable.”