Faced
with rise in malicious cyber attacks that try to steal critical data,
Indian firms will spend over Rs 25 crore on average on information
security this year, a study by global consulting firm PwC revealed.
According
to Pricewaterhouse Coopers' (PwC) the State of Information Security
Survey 2014, spending by companies marks a 100 per cent increase
compared to 2012.
"Indian companies are
spending more than Rs 25 crore on information security as they are
reporting an increase in security incidents. This marks a 100 per cent
increase in firms spending above this amount, compared to 2012," it
said.
The survey, PwC's sixth in India, was
conducted as part of Global State of Information Security Survey 2014 by
PwC, CIO Magazine and CSO Magazine. It covered 624 CEOs and senior
management from across 17 industry sectors in India, it added.
There
has been 98 per cent increase in the number of information security
incidents in May-June 2013 compared to the same time in 2012, when 2,989
such incidents were reported by the respondents, it said.
PwC's
evaluation, based on criteria like effectiveness of strategy,
evaluation of security events and so on revealed that only 38 per cent
of respondents covered can be considered as having advanced security
system in place, the report revealed.
"Survey
results show that focus on emerging technologies and safeguards is the
route to improvement. Organisations must identify most valuable assets
and prioritise protection," PwC India Leader (Information Technology
Risk Management) Sivarama Krishan told PTI.
Security
incidents should be seen as a critical business risk that may not
always be preventable, but can be managed to acceptable levels, he
added.
Compared to global figures, India is
playing catch-up in deploying safeguards like behavioural profiling,
monitoring, security information and event management technologies and
threat intelligence, the report said.
Globally,
China has the advantage in implementation of technology safeguards to
protect against today's dynamic threats, it added.
While,
Russia also shows solid progress in deployment of safeguards that
monitor data and assets, it is the US which leads the tally, it said.
"Companies
used traditional safeguards like firewall, etc, but now they are also
using analytics to analyse the threats. However, India is still behind
in the use to such techniques to check intrusions," Krishan said.
Enterprise
mobility and cloud services are gaining greater traction with
organisations in India. Yet information security for mobile devices and
cloud services lags behind adoption rates, the survey said.
"Less
than 50 per cent of respondents claim that their organisations have
fundamental information security controls for mobile security and even
less than 20 per cent have policies addressing use of mobile phones," it
added.
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