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Ponemon: Cost of breaches rising

05 March 2009

The Ponemon Institute has published its annual survey analyzing the cost of data breaches, and has found them rising. Its report, 2008 Annual Study: The Cost of a Data Breach, analyzed input from 43 US firms and found that the cost of the average breach was up 2.5% from last year. It had risen even more sharply since 2006, climbing 11%.

The report found that the cost of lost business continued to make up the biggest proportion of the cost of a data breach. It now accounts for 69% of the cost, up from 65% last year. Third party data breaches were also on the rise. 44% of data breaches in 2008 originated with third parties such as contractors and outsourcers, compared with 40% in 2007.
The per-victim cost of a data breach was $243, compared to $192 for those who had suffered breaches in the past.

"You not only have to deal with the systems and processes and people within your own four walls, but you must also get a third party whom you have no control over to change their systems, too," said John Dasher, product development manager at PGP, which sponsored the report. "As news of these breaches gets out, it will educate people that they need to ensure that the people with whom they're doing business have a security policy that's in line with their own."

 

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Data Loss Internet and Network Security

 

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