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2022 BrightCloud® Threat Report: The year of innovation for cybercrime

2022 BrightCloud® Threat Report: The year of innovation for cybercrime
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114 replies

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  • Popular Voice
  • 36 replies
  • May 6, 2022

Congratulations.


Always a good read,.“The Middle East, Asia, and Africa were the regions with the highest percentage of infections.” make perfectly sense.


  • New Member
  • 2 replies
  • May 11, 2022

Apple being the larger ones spoofed makes sense considering how they lead the sway of smart phones and tablets for a while.


  • New Member
  • 2 replies
  • May 16, 2022

Congratulations to all the winners


  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • May 17, 2022

“During 2021, 82% of ransomware attacks targeted organizations with less than 1,000 employees. The smallest organizations, with 100 employees or less, comprised 44% of ransomware victims.”

I would say that 44% for smaller business may be on the low side.  I see these attempts almost daily.


Interesting read!


I'm really amazed by the increase in Apple phishing attack. When I work with Mac users, their goto reaction is Macs are built safe so I don't have to worry about viruses,  hacking, etc. But they are still vulnerable,  so it's very important for all users to be cautious. 


jonwalsh
New Voice
  • New Voice
  • 6 replies
  • May 25, 2022

I was interested to learn that, “The smallest organizations, with 100 employees or less, comprised 44% of ransomware victims”. This wasn’t necessarily surprising given that smaller companies have less resources in terms of support from IT experts, but having information like this is valuable for our clients. As an MSP this is relevant to a good proportion of our clients, and ransomware poses a massive threat to companies that prize system uptime over most other things.


  • New Member
  • 3 replies
  • May 26, 2022

The high infection rates amongst personal devices is not suprising, but seeing the numbers is useful. Worth addressing within any company that uses a BYOD policy and the need for those devices to be used as securely as any business device.


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  • Fresh Face
  • 2 replies
  • June 3, 2022

Protect your BYOD PCs - they expose your corporate network too!


Vipercat
New Voice
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  • New Voice
  • 8 replies
  • June 4, 2022

Why would people allow their machines to be infected with malware more then once? Some even 5 times (19%)? Unbelievable. They never learn…..

 


MajorHavoc
Bronze VIP
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  • Bronze VIP
  • 1267 replies
  • June 10, 2022
Vipercat wrote:

Why would people allow their machines to be infected with malware more then once? Some even 5 times (19%)? Unbelievable. They never learn…..

 

I’m not sure “allowed” is the right word here. Remember we have a more unique view of these issues. To some users, this is all black magic and have no cause and effect understanding of the issues. It’s our jobs to help educate people so they can learn to help prevent these infections. 


russell.harris
Popular Voice
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You’re right there @MajorHavoc 


For me it was that the education/training of users is a constant requirement for any business wishing to limit these types of attacks.


  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • June 23, 2022

I strongly agree with this part. With a layered approach and proper user training, it is possible to drastically reduce the chance of attacks being successful.


It appears that Malware infection is being dropped as an attack vector in favour of the Ransomware - obviously a more lucrative return on their efforts.

 

Where malware is being deployed, the ZeroDay Heuristic scanners are required to identify these increasingly unique apps.

 

 


Security awareness, learning is a must! Educate the user and you can reduce a lot of risks  


  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • July 19, 2022
  • 53% of consumer PCs were infected more than once, and 19% infected more than 5 times.

This surprised me, i would of thought you would learn after the first instance.


  • New Member
  • 4 replies
  • July 22, 2022

how antivirus on  phone  zte max 10


TylerM
Administrator
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  • Author
  • Sr. Security Analyst & Community Manager
  • 1260 replies
  • July 25, 2022
gregkrause wrote:

how antivirus on  phone  zte max 10

Hey @gregkrause have you seen this post?

Media not available

 


  • New Member
  • 2 replies
  • July 28, 2022

This is a worrying yet eye opening fact.

“During 2021, 82% of ransomware attacks targeted organizations with less than 1,000 employees. The smallest organizations, with 100 employees or less, comprised 44% of ransomware victims.”


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  • New Member
  • 4 replies
  • August 17, 2022
  • During 2021, 82% of ransomware attacks targeted organizations with less than 1,000 employees. The smallest organizations, with 100 employees or less, comprised 44% of ransomware victims.
  • The year-end average for ransomware payments in 2021 more than doubled the 2020 average, hitting $322,168.

The small businesses without large amounts of reserve cash or large IT departments are the easy targets.  Hence the growing numbers.  I shudder.


  • New Member
  • 3 replies
  • August 17, 2022

Clearly, an educated user is the front line of defense.


  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • August 22, 2022

Expected Microsoft to be targeted by phishing more.


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  • New Voice
  • 12 replies
  • August 24, 2022
James404d wrote:

“53% of consumer PCs were infected more than once, and 19% infected more than 5 times”

 

More. Than. 5. Times.  This just blows my mind.  Some people just never learn.

I know one happened to a friend of mine. Some people just shouldn’t have a PC. I try to help her but she just don’t listen, I tell her to hover on the email address and not to open it if she doesn’t recognize the address. Well she did and she must of clk’d on something then her computer cashed and then a pop-up with an 800 number for Microsoft which she called then the person who answered told her, that her PC had been hacked. Then he added some one on to the call who was supposed to be with her bank. He also had the last four digits of her account numbers. Glad she called me before transferring any money.


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