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Enterprises: Cybercrime costs us dear

Tom Espiner ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 17 Mar 2006 12:15 GMT

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Chief information officers see cybercrime as a greater threat than physical crime, according to an IBM survey of manufacturing, financial, healthcare and retail enterprises.

Fifty-seven percent of the 600 US businesses surveyed said they are losing more money through cybercrime — by way of lost income, the loss of current and potential customers, and decreased employee productivity — than from conventional crime.

Three quarters of US IT executives surveyed said some of the threat to their corporate security came from inside their own organisations, while 84 percent believed that criminal hacker groups were increasingly replacing lone hackers as the perpetrators of cybercrime.

Businesses from 16 countries outside the US, including the UK, were also surveyed, with similar results. Fifty-eight percent of chief information officers across international businesses surveyed said cybercrime was costing them more than physical crime.

Only 53 percent of the international respondents thought they had adequate safeguards in place to combat organised cybercrime — although US repondents were more bullish, with 83 percent saying they were well prepared.

Seventy-three percent of the 600 US CIOs surveyed had responded to the from threat of cybercrime by upgrading their antivirus software, while 69 percent had upgraded their firewall. Two thirds of them were implementing intrusion detection or prevention technologies, while 53 percent were implementing patch management systems on their networks.

IT executives in the finance industry were more concerned about cybercrime than their counterparts in other industries, the survey found.

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On the contrary, if vendors were forced to stand behind their products it should increase innovation. It would force more, and better , testing before hitting the sales floor, resulting in fewer updates and less downtime for the consumer. At present the EULA removes responsibility from the vendor, and moves it to the user, which is a step backward. Make the vendor responsibility for their code.

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RSA: Vendor liability may stifle innovation