Financial and Insurance
NAICS 52

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  • Frequency

     

    2,527 incidents, 690 with confirmed data disclosure

    Top patterns

     

    Basic Web Application Attacks, System Intrusion, and Miscellaneous Error represent 79% of breaches.

    Threat actors

     

    External (73%), Internal (27%) (breaches)

    Actor motives

     

    Financial (95%), Espionage (4%), Grudge (1%) (breaches)

    Data compromised

     

    Personal (71%), Credentials (40%), Other (27%), Bank (22%) (breaches)

    Top IG1 protective controls

     

    Security Awareness and Skills Training (CSC 14), Secure Configuration of Enterprise Assets and Software (CSC 4), Data Protection (CSC 3)

    What is the same?

     

    Basic Web Application Attacks and Miscellaneous Errors continue to play a large part in breaches for this vertical as they did last year.

    Resumen

     

    The Financial sector continues to be victimized by financially motivated organized crime, often via the actions of Social (Phishing), Hacking (Use of stolen credentials) and Malware (Ransomware). Finally, Miscellaneous Errors, often in the form of Misdelivery, is still very common as it has been for the past three years in a row.

  • Patterns

     

    5-Year difference

     

    3-Year difference

    Basic Web Application Attacks

     

    Greater

     

    Greater

    Miscellaneous Errors

     

    Greater

     

    Greater

    System Intrusion

     

    Greater

     

    Greater

  • Patrón

     

    Difference with peers

     

     

    Basic Web Application Attacks

     

    Greater

     

     

    System Intrusion

     

    Less

     

     

    Miscellaneous Errors

     

    Greater

     

     

    • In 2016 servers were involved in 50% of Financial breaches, as opposed to 90% currently. However, the specific variety of “Server – Web application” has increased from 12% to 51% over that same timeframe. Thus, accounting for Basic Web application Attacks’ position in the top three patterns. A key component of these attacks is that they usually involve the Use of stolen credentials, which is the number one Action variety in this vertical. These creds may have been obtained in any number of ways, but brute force hacking and credential stuffing are the most likely culprits. One thing is certain, stolen creds and web apps go together like peanut butter and chocolate. 

       

      ‘I’ll show you mine if you show me yours’

      The Error variety of “Misdelivery” (16%) is the second most common action variety in this vertical. Misdelivery is exactly what it sounds like, delivering PII or other sensitive information to the wrong recipient. One might expect to see that variety more often in Public Sector or Healthcare because, by their very nature, they send a great deal of mail. Instead, our data indicates that Misdelivery is approximately three times higher in Financial than in the other industries. We here on the DBIR team were taken aback by this finding, as it would be embarrassing if any unauthorized person were to view our checks and learn that we make countless millions for writing this report each year26

       

      ‘Through the years…’

      System Intrusion has doubled from 14% in 2016 to 30% this year. Organized crime was responsible for only 49% of breaches in 2018 vs the 79% we see in this report. Availability was affected in only 6% of breaches back in 2016, vs 14% today, and the discovery method of Actor disclosure was 5% (in 2016) as opposed to the 58% in this year’s report. We need hardly say that this is mainly due to ransomware attacks, but to be on the safe side, we will say it anyway: 

      Finally, we would be remiss if we did not mention that DoS attacks continue to be a huge problem and account for 58% of security incidents in this vertical. That is approximately twice as much as we see in the other industries.

    • 26 If only.

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