Magnet Forensics Survey Shows Evolving Cyber Threat Landscape Is Leading to Widespread Burnout
16 Febrero 2023 - 8:15AM
Business Wire
Respondents say automation would be a valuable addition at a
time they're struggling with surge of incidents, talent
shortages.
Magnet Forensics (TSX: MAGT), a developer of digital
investigation solutions for more than 4,000 enterprises and public
safety organizations in over 100 countries, today announced the
release of its 2023 State of Enterprise DFIR survey. The survey
revealed that the rapid evolution of cybercrime is weighing on
security teams substantially more than it did last year, leading to
widespread burnout and potential regulatory risk.
“Digital forensics and incident response teams have proven to be
indispensable to combat cybercriminals but the complexity and
volume of attacks and the dearth of talent available to address
them is leading to unprecedented burnout,” said Adam Belsher, chief
executive officer of Magnet Forensics. “Strategic organizations are
turning to Magnet AXIOM Cyber to find the root cause and other
critical evidence required to investigate incidents and mitigate
risks. Magnet AUTOMATE Enterprise, meanwhile, is helping them
address the growing volumes of incidents by automatically launching
investigations and keeping them running 24/7/365.”
The annual Magnet Forensics survey polled 492 digital forensics
and incident response (DFIR) decision makers and practitioners who
are predominately located in North America, Europe, the Middle East
and Africa. Its respondents described the current cybercrime
landscape as one that is evolving beyond ransomware and taking a
toll on their ability to investigate.
- More than 40 per cent of respondents described the evolution of
cyberattack techniques as a “large” or “extreme” problem impacting
their investigations. This represents a 50 per cent increase from
the 2022 State of Enterprise DFIR report.
- Business email compromise is on the rise and is now occurring
more frequently than ransomware, the most common security threat in
last year’s report. The highest number of respondents — 14 per cent
— said they encounter it “very frequently.”
- Business email compromise attacks are the most likely to
require third-party resources to assist with the investigation,
according to 50 per cent of respondents.
- It’s taking security teams too long to get to the root cause of
these evolving attacks. More than 43 per cent said it takes them
between one week and more than a month. About 1 in 3 respondents
said that identifying the root cause requires either a “complete
overhaul” or “major improvements.”
With cybercriminals intensifying their efforts, DFIR teams now
find themselves investigating waves of incidents that are growing
in volume and complexity. According to 45 per cent of respondents,
the surge in investigations and the data associated to them is
either a “large” or “extreme” problem for their organizations.
Unable to handle this data alone, nearly two-thirds look to third
parties for help. A global talent shortage, one that’s left more
than 755,000 unfilled cyber jobs in the U.S. alone, isn’t helping
matters, according to the respondents. Nearly 1 in 3 say that
recruiting and hiring new DFIR professionals is a challenge. Each
of these factors is contributing to their burnout and leading them
to seek out alternate solutions like automation.
- More than half (54 per cent) of the respondents said they were
feeling burned out in their jobs.
- Alert and investigation fatigue is likely playing a role in
burnout as 64 per cent of respondents said it is a “real
issue.”
- Today’s investigative workflows are being slowed down by a
reliance on repetitive tasks and tools that aren’t interoperable.
The same percentage of respondents — 37 per cent — described both
as either a “large” or “extreme” problem.
- Their workload may be contributing to exposing their
organizations to regulatory risk. Nearly half (46 per cent) said
they just don’t have the time to understand new cybersecurity
regulations.
- The respondents see automation as the solution. More than 50
per cent said automation would be “extremely valuable” or “highly
valuable” for several DFIR tasks, including the remote acquisition
of target endpoints and the processing of digital evidence.
For more information, please visit magnetforensics.com and
download the full 2023 State of Enterprise DFIR report.
Survey methodology
Magnet Forensics conducted a web survey of 492 digital forensics
and incident response decision makers and practitioners between
Oct. 4 and Nov. 1, 2022. The respondents range from analysts to
executives and represent organizations in industries such as
technology, manufacturing, government, telecommunications and
healthcare. The survey targeted professionals in North America and
Europe, the Middle East and Africa, which account for 94 per cent
of the respondents.
About Magnet Forensics
Founded in 2010, Magnet Forensics is a developer of digital
investigation software that acquires, analyzes, reports on, and
manages evidence from digital sources, including computers, mobile
devices, IoT devices and cloud services. Magnet Forensics’ software
is used by more than 4,000 public and private sector customers in
over 100 countries and helps investigators fight crime, protect
assets and guard national security.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230216005384/en/
Neil Desai Tel: 226-243-6337 PR@magnetforensics.com
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