Original URL: 
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/07/18/csi_fbi_security_survey/
Cost of US cyber attacks plummets
By John Leyden (john.leyden at theregister.co.uk)
Published Monday 18th July 2005 16:17 GMT

The cost of individual cyber attacks fell dramatically in the US last year
but unauthorised access and the theft of proprietary information remain top
security concerns.

The 10th annual Computer Crime and Security Survey, put together by the
Computer Security Institute (CSI) in conjunction with information security
experts at the FBI, shows financial losses resulting from security breaches
down for the fourth successive year. The cost of breaches averaged $204,000
per respondent - down 61 per cent from last year's average loss of $526,000.

Virus attacks continue as the source of the greatest financial pain, making
up 32 per cent of the overall losses reported. But unauthorized access
showed a dramatic increase and replaced denial of service as the second most
significant contributor to cybercrime losses. Unauthorised access was
fingered for a quarter (24 per cent) of losses reported in the CSI/FBI
Computer Crime and Security Survey 2005. Meanwhile losses from theft of
proprietary information doubled last year, based on the survey of 700
computer security practitioners in various US corporations, universities and
government agencies.

The study found fears about negative publicity are preventing organisation
from reporting cybercrime incidents to the police, a perennial problem the
CSI/FBI study reckons is only getting worse. Assuming that this isn't true
of what respondents also told CSI's researchers (academics from the
University of Maryland), the study presents a picture of reducing cyber
crime losses that contrasts sharply with vendor-sponsored studies.

Chris Keating, CSI Director, said its study suggests that organizations that
raise their level of security awareness but warns against complacency in the
face of a changing cybercrime threat.

"Individual users are more exposed to computer crime than ever, due to the
growth in identity theft schemes. We can't help but note the shift in the
survey results toward more financial damage due to theft of sensitive
company data. This is an ominous, though not unexpected, development and
underscores the need to insist that enterprise networks be properly
safeguarded," he said.

The CSI/FBI Computer Crime and Security Survey aims to help determine the
scope of computer crime along with promoting security awareness. It can be
downloaded from the CSI's website GoCSI.com (PDF
(http://www.gocsi.com/forms/fbi/csi_fbi_survey.jhtml) - registration
required). ®



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