Scary Data Breach Statistics of 2017

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Last updated: July 2, 2018

2017-Data-Breach-Statistics.jpgOn October 25, 2017, the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC) published a compilation of confirmed data breach notifications affecting US organizations and customers so far this year.* The headline numbers for the year to date — 1,120 total breaches and more than 171 million records exposed — were frightening in their own right, especially considering that in all of 2016, the ITRC reported 1,039 total breaches and just over 36.6 million records exposed. But what really stood out to us wasn't the numbers that were known, but the numbers that remained unknown.

Acknowledging the Fear of the Unknown

The ITRC identifies the number of breaches and the number of records exposed in five categories:

  1. Banking/Credit/Financial
  2. Business
  3. Educational
  4. Government/Military
  5. Medical/Healthcare

The report’s one-page summary for October showed the high-level numbers for each of these categories, as well as totals and how the categories relate to one another, percentage-wise. But it was the full report that was truly eye-opening: It listed the breaches within each category and the number of records exposed in each incident, but it also noted incidents in which the number of records exposed was unknown. The following table illustrates how little we actually know about the level of personal data exposure that is happening on a daily basis:

 

Total Number of Breaches (January to October 2017)

Total Number of Records Exposed

Number of Breaches with Total Records Identified

Number of Breaches with Total Records Unknown

Banking/Credit/Financial

70

2,908,580

8

62

Business

584

156,942,081

68

516

Educational

104

1,145,430

38

66

Government/Military

55

5,800,133

41

14

Medical/Healthcare

307

4,815,692

266

41

Source: ITRC Data Breach Report dated 10/25/2017

 

We explore end users' understanding of a variety of cybersecurity topics and how their knowledge levels are impacting security postures across a range of industries. 

 

 

 

 

In total, well more than half — 699 of 1,120, or 62.4% — of the total number of breaches had a question mark tied to them with regard to impacted records. The disparity is mainly due to the lack of disclosure noted in the banking, business, and education categories. It is alarming to see how little is being made public about breaches in these sectors. It certainly appears that consumers benefit from the increased (albeit forced) transparency within the government and healthcare categories, as far as disclosure goes (though that is no doubt offset by the fact that more than 10 million records have been exposed so far this year in those two categories alone).

The even sadder reality of the situation is this: What we don’t know about US data breach totals (to say nothing of global totals) extends far beyond this report. The ITRC self-discloses that its report only includes data from breaches that have been confirmed/published by a “credible source”; items are excluded if the ITRC is “not certain that the source is real and credible.”

That, of course, means that organizations would have to formally — and publicly — disclose a breach in order for it to be counted, which we know is not happening as often as it should. As Adam Levin, Chairman of ITRC report sponsor CyberScout (formerly IDT911), noted back in 2016, “Many [breaches] continue to fly under the radar because many businesses aim to avoid the financial dislocation, liability, and loss of goodwill that comes with disclosure and notification.”

Recognizing the Role of the User in Data Breach Prevention

While cybercriminals are certainly working overtime to infiltrate organizations, the rise in data breaches is partly due to lack of cybersecurity awareness and knowledge among end users. In its end-of-year analysis of the 2017 US data breach landscape, the ITRC and CyberScout noted the following about the sources of identified data breaches:

  • Hacking (a category that includes phishing, ransomware/malware, and skimming) was the primary method of attack in 60% of the overall breaches, a 3.2% increase from 2016. It was particularly prevalent in the Business sector, with nearly 40% of organizations attributing their breaches to this type of attack
    • Phishing figured into 21.4% of hacking-based attacks and 14% of Business hacks.
    • Ransomware and/or malware was identified in 12.4% of attacks attributed to hacking. It was identified as the source of 8.4% of hacking breaches in the Business sector.18.5% of attacks attributed to hacking.
  • Employee-driven factors (i.e., error, negligence, improper disposal, and loss) were the root cause of more than 10% of breaches, resulting in more than 145 million compromised records.
  • Accidental online exposure of data was identified in nearly 7% of breaches and more than 8 million compromised records.

In examining these causes, it’s clear that employee behaviors figure into a large number of data breaches — and that human factor is costly. But the question is: Do your employees truly know how to avoid mistakes?

We’d make the case that users can’t forget things that they they’ve never known. Awareness is not knowledge. Simulated phishing attacks — while valuable assessment tools — are not training. And cybersecurity threats extend beyond the phish. To manage end-user risk more effectively, you must give your employees a seat at the table and empower them to be part of the solution — and thoughtful, ongoing security awareness training can help you do just that.

Find End-of-Year Stats in Our SecureWorld Guest Blog

Interested in learning more about the ITRC's statistics through the end of 2017? We compared and analyzed the numbers in a guest blog for SecureWorld, which you can find on the SecureWorld website.

 

* Per the ITRC: “A breach is defined as an event in which an individual’s name plus Social Security Number (SSN), driver’s license number, medical record, or a financial record/credit/debit card is potentially put at risk — either in electronic or paper format. For data breach incidents involving only emails, user names, and/or passwords, the number of records are not included in the overall total number of records.”

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