<div dir="ltr"><a href="http://www.cpapracticeadvisor.com/news/12184515/when-business-computers-are-held-for-ransom-downtime-is-biggest-cost">http://www.cpapracticeadvisor.com/news/12184515/when-business-computers-are-held-for-ransom-downtime-is-biggest-cost</a><br><p>Cases of ransomeware are on the rise in businesses of all sizes,
according to a new study. And the biggest cost often isn't the ransom,
but the cost of downtime and lost revenue while the business tries to
work around the hijacked and blocked computers, or even if they
ultimately pay the bad guys.</p>
<p>In short, ransomware is malicious software that gets downloaded
(usually on accident) onto a business computer or network. The
perpetrators of the scam then lock down the computers and threated to
erase key data if the business doesn't pay a ransom.</p>
<p>The new report by cloud IT services provider <a class="" href="https://www.intermedia.net/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Intermedia</a> surveyed nearly 300 expert IT consultants[1] for their perspectives on the scope and costs of this trending malware.</p><p>The experts' opinions contradicted conventional wisdom regarding the
threat associated with ransomware: Business downtime was ranked as a far
bigger cost than the ransom itself. The survey also found that
ransomware is affecting bigger businesses and multiple victims within
each business.</p>
<p><strong>Key Finding #1: Downtime is more detrimental than ransom costs</strong> <br>A
ransomware outbreak creates two hard choices for businesses: Either
spend multiple days recovering locked files from backups, or pay ransom
to an organized crime syndicate.</p><p>In either scenario, though,
businesses are likely to face significant user downtime that overshadows
the cost of the ransom. 72 percent of infected business users could not
access their data for at least two days following a ransomware
outbreak, and 32 percent lost access for five days or more.</p>
<p>As a result, experts observed significant data recovery costs,
reduced customer satisfaction, missed deadlines, lost sales and, in many
cases, traumatized employees.</p>
<p>This widely observed downtime implies that few companies possess a
business continuity solution for a ransomware outbreak. Such a solution
enables users to remain productive during a ransomware outbreak. It
offers the capabilities to instantly roll back an archive of files to
their uninfected state and to immediately access those clean files from
alternate devices.</p>
<p>Richard Walters, SVP of Security Products at Intermedia, stated, "In
the age of ransomware, what matters is how quickly employees are able to
get back to work. Traditional backup and file sharing solutions are
increasingly inadequate when it comes to addressing this growing
concern, putting businesses at risk. Modern business continuity
solutions that combine real-time backup, mass file restores and remote
access combat threats by minimizing the crippling effects of downtime."</p><p><strong>Key Finding #2: Ransomware is targeting bigger businesses</strong> <br>Ransomware
should no longer be seen solely as a threat to individuals and small
businesses. Nearly 60 percent of businesses hit by ransomware had more
than 100 employees, and 25 percent were enterprises with more than 1,000
employees.</p>
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<p>What's more, the virus was observed propagating rapidly within
corporate networks: 86 percent of outbreaks affected two or more
employees, and 47 percent spread to more than 20 people.</p>
<p>Felix Yanko, President at Technology & Beyond, added, "The world
is becoming more cyber-aware, but ransomware's depravity keeps it three
steps ahead. CryptoLocker, for instance, will take down multiple offices
in one sweep, should it infect a shared server. A business that tries
to restore from a ransomware attack off of traditional backup usually
loses weeks of work due to lost files, plus a day or more of downtime
while computers are wiped and reloaded. Companies must have measures in
place to mitigate the devastation of ransomware."</p><p><strong>Key Finding #3: Ransomware is a growth industry</strong> <br>The
threat of ransomware is rapidly growing. According to Intermedia's
report, 43 percent of IT consultants have had their customers fall
victim to ransomware, 48 percent saw an increase in ransomware-related
support inquiries and 59 percent expect the number of attacks to
increase this year.</p>
Walter Chamblee, Director of Information Technology at Signaturefd.com,
said, "Ransomware attacks are on the rise and are growing in complexity.
Without the right protection measures in place, ransomware can be
majorly disruptive to a business. In these cases, it's the user downtime
and the hassle for IT that's far costlier, even if you pay the ransom."</div>