Cyber report: 2015 was the year of collateral damage.

AuthorTadjdeh, Yasmin

* With the Office of Personnel Management hack and other intrusions affecting tens of millions of people last year, a recent cybersecurity report dubbed 2015 the "year of collateral damage."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The annual cyber risk report--which was produced by Hewlett Packard Enterprise and released in February--said breaches affected citizens who never dreamed they would be involved in such an intrusion.

"Folks are seeing that not only do these hacks result in perhaps the theft of your personal data, your identity data, but... [hackers] can do an awful lot of very bad things with it," said Denby Starling, HPE's vice president and account executive for Navy and Marine programs. "They can not only steal your money, they not only can impersonate you online, but they in some cases can embarrass you publicly."

The report found that while organizations such as Microsoft and Adobe released more patches than ever before, that was not enough to stymie some viruses.

"The most exploited bug from 2014 happened to be the most exploited bug in 2015 as well--and it's now over five years old," the report said, referring to a virus known as CVE-2010-2568. "While vendors continue to produce security remediations, it does little good if they are not installed by the end...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT