- 233 Per cent Increase Over Q1 2013
- SafeNet Breach Level Index Reveals Only 1 Per cent of 254 Q1 Data Breaches Were "Secure Breaches" Using Encryption
- Four of the five worst data breaches occurred in South Korea
SafeNet, Inc., a global leader in data protection solutions, today released the highlights from its SafeNet Breach Level Index (BLI) for the first quarter of 2014. Nearly 200 million records were stolen, the equivalent of approximately 93,000 records stolen every hour, between January and March, which was an increase of 233 per cent over the same time last year. Of the 254 data breaches that occurred during the quarter, only 1 per cent were "secure breaches," or breaches where strong encryption, key management, or authentication solutions protected the data from being used.
Q1 Highlights
The Breach Level Index provides details about hundreds of individual data breaches, which can be sorted by source, industry, risk level, and date. Highlights from the first quarter research include:
More than 254 data breaches were publicised, representing 200 million lost or stolen data records. Because of the varying strictness of data breach reporting requirements around the globe, this quarterly data does not include organisations that didn't disclose the amount of data records that were exposed. In all probability, the total number is likely to be even higher.
South Korea took the top spot of all countries with four of the top five breaches worldwide and a loss of 158 million records across a variety of industries. This represents 79 per cent of the total number of reported breached records worldwide. These four breaches included the Korea Credit Bureau, Korean Medical Association, Korea Telecom, and Naver, a major Korean search portal. While the number of South Korean breached records was extremely high, the number of breach incidents in Asia Pacific as a whole accounted for only 7 per cent of the total number of global breaches, dwarfed by the 78 per cent (199 incidents) that occurred in North America and 13 per cent in Europe.
The financial industry was hit hardest, accounting for 56 per cent of all data records lost or stolen. However, it represented 14 per cent of total breaches during the quarter.
The healthcare industry was hit hard in terms of breach events, accounting for 24 per cent of all breaches. However, the industry accounted for just 9 per cent of data records lost or stolen.
20 per cent of all records lost or stolen came from the technology industry, while retail represented just 1 per cent of data records lost or stolen and 10 per cent of all data breaches, even including the Sally Beauty Supply breach, which made major headlines.
Government and education breaches accounted for less than 1 per cent of total records stolen and 23 per cent of data breaches, including the University of Maryland's breach of 287,000 records stolen early this year.
Malicious outsiders accounted for 156 (62 per cent) of total incidents during the first quarter, with over 86 million records stolen. Malicious insiders only accounted for 11 per cent of total incidents, but they were much more effective, accounting for 52 per cent of records stolen. Accidental loss represented 25 per cent of total incidents, while hacktivist and state-sponsored attacks added up to only 2 per cent of the total.
There were approximately three breaches and 2.2 million records stolen each day, and more than 92,000 per hour.
Additional quarterly breakdowns are available in the BLI Executive Summary.
"The white noise of data breach reporting makes every breach seem just as bad as the last, but this is certainly not the case. Some organisations are handling customer data responsibly, and others are not. Tools like the Breach Level Index can help companies and the public alike understand the actual severity of breaches on a graduated scale and distinguish between these two groups," said Jason Hart, VP Cloud Solutions, SafeNet. "In differentiating between secure and insecure breaches, it's important to look at which victims have protected their data with encryption to limit the damage from a