Rank | Industry | Average no. breaches per employee | Number of data breaches in the past year |
1 | Information/communication | 66.17 | 320,060 |
2 | Finance/insurance | 18.45 | 305,785 |
3 | Retail/ wholesale (including vehicle sales and repairs) | 11.51 | 183,500 |
4 | Transport/storage | 4.98 | 111,654 |
5 | Education | 8.04 | 106,365 |
6 | Utilities/production | 3.1 | 55,862 |
7 | Construction | 11.56 | 54,847 |
8 | Professional, scientific/technical | 0.51 | 8,370 |
9 | Health, social care/social work | 0.42 | 7,010 |
10 | Entertainment, service/membership organisations | 0.85 | 6,238 |
11 | Administration/real estate | 0.05 | 5,674 |
12 | Food/hospitality | 0.04 | 5,176 |
According to Scams.info, the information and communication (IT) industry is the least cyber-secure in the UK, with 320,060 data breaches in the past year. Equating to 66.17 average breaches per employee, IT employees are over 3 times as likely to suffer a cyber security breach than those in the finance and insurance industry (18.45 average breaches). This adds up to IT employees potentially suffering cyber breaches at least once per week each, on average.
Food and hospitality industry is the most cyber-secure
Scams.info also found that the food and hospitality industry is the most cyber-secure of all sectors observed, with only 5,176 data breaches in the past year, equating to a miniscule 0.04 breaches per employee. This is a 314,884 drop in data breaches when compared to the IT sector, and 498 fewer annual breaches than the administration and real estate sector in eleventh place.
Web development and cyber security expert Ledi Sallilari from the SEO consulting firm Reboot offered the following tips on the best ways businesses and employees can protect themselves from data breaches at work:
- “For tech and remote-based industries, the importance of cyber-security training is invaluable. Implementing safe practiceswhen working online can play a vital part in keeping the data of your company, clients and employees safe from attack.
- The main cause of online security breaches can be largely put down to human error. Avoid easily guess-able passwords that use identifying information (such as your dog’s name) and opt for the longest passwords possible. If there is an option for your password to be between 8-24 characters, go for 24.
- Be aware of phishing attacks, and do not open any emails you do not recognise. Some hackers may even impersonate your boss, so it’s always best to double check directly with the alleged sender themselves before actioning anything from a suspicious email.”
The full dataset can be found here. For any further information, please do not hesitate to get in touch.
Credit to https://www.scams.info/ who provided the above post
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