Conventional wisdom holds that any business that uses computers to operate or store information — and that's pretty much every business operating today — is at risk of experiencing a cyberattack. That thinking may be doubly true given that human error precipitates more than eight out of ten cybercrimes, according to Stanford University research. So it follows that if a business uses computers, and there are people running those computers, a breach will happen. Three out of four companies in the U.S. risked a cyberattack in 2023, according to Statista. Once a breach occurs, it can be costly. IBM reports that the average data breach in 2024 will cost a company $4.88 billion, and a "megabreach" will cost many times more than that. Some of the expenses contributing to breach recovery costs include:
- Discovery time
- Forensic investigations
- Client communications
- Records recovery
- Staff retraining
- Legal expenses
- Fresh security measures
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