Two out of three (66 per cent) organisations hit by ransomware in India admitted paying the ransom.
Data was encrypted in 91 per cent of attacks that successfully breached an organisation in India. The average cost of addressing the impact of such an attack in India, including business downtime, lost orders, operational costs, and more, was a little over Rs 8 crore.
Delhi topped the list as 85 per cent organisations in the national capital were hit by ransomware attacks in the past 12 months, followed by Bengaluru (83 per cent) and Kolkata (81 per cent).
At fourth spot was Mumbai-based firms (81 per cent), Chennai (79 per cent) at sixth place and Hyderabad (74 per cent) seventh, according to the "state of ransomware 2020" global survey by cybersecurity firm Sophos.
Ransomware is a form of malware that encrypts a victim's files. The attacker then demands a ransom from the victim to restore access to the files.
According to Chester Wisniewski, principal research scientist, Sophos, organizations may feel intense pressure to pay the ransom to avoid damaging downtime.
"On the face of it, paying the ransom appears to be an effective way of getting data restored, but this is illusory. Paying the ransom makes little difference to the recovery burden in terms of time and cost," he said.
This could be because it is unlikely that a single magical decryption key is all that's needed to recover.
"Often, the attackers may share several keys and using them to restore data may be a complex and time-consuming affair," said Wisniewski.
According to the report, only 8 per cent of victims in India were able to stop the attack before their data could be encrypted, compared with a global average of 24 per cent.
Nearly 29 per cent of the IT managers surveyed were able to recover their data from backups without paying the ransom.
Globally, the average cost of recovery is $1.4 million if organisations pay the ransom and $730,000 if they don't.
The survey polled 5,000 IT decision makers in organisations in 26 countries across six continents.
Every organization in India that paid the ransom got their data back, although this was not always the case elsewhere.
Globally, nearly 5 per cent of public sector organizations paid the ransom but didn't get their data back.
In fact, 13 per cent of the public sector organizations surveyed never managed to restore their encrypted data, compared to 6% overall.
"An effective backup system that enables organizations to restore encrypted data without paying the attackers is business critical, but there are other important elements to consider if a company is to be truly resilient to ransomware," informed Wisniewski.
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