Most Educational Organizations Paid More Than the Original Ransom Demand, Says Sophos Survey
September 12 2024 - 6:30AM
Sophos, a global leader of innovative security solutions that
defeat cyberattacks, today released findings from its annual sector
survey report, “The State of Ransomware in Education 2024.”
According to the report, the median ransom payment was $6.6 million
for lower education and $4.4 million for higher education
organizations. In addition, the survey states that 55% of lower
education respondents and 67% of higher education respondents paid
more than the initial demand.
Ransomware attacks are causing more of a strain as only 30% of
ransomware victims surveyed in both lower and higher education were
able to fully recover in a week or less, down from last year’s 33%
(lower education) and 40% (higher education). This slowing recovery
rate is likely due to education organizations operating with
limited teams and resources, making it harder for them to
coordinate recovery efforts.
“Unfortunately, schools, universities and other educational
institutions are targets that are beholden to municipalities,
communities and the students themselves, which inherently creates
high pressure situations if they are hit and destabilized by
ransomware. Educational institutions feel a sense of responsibility
to remain open and continue providing their services to their
communities. These two factors could be contributing to why victims
feel so much pressure to pay,” said Chester Wisniewski, director,
field CTO, Sophos.
“We also know that ransomware attackers have upped the ante when
it comes to getting paid. Compromising their victims’ backups is
now a mainstream element of ransomware attacks, giving adversaries
the opportunity to subsequently increase the ransom demand when it
is clear that the data cannot be recovered without the decryption
key.”
In fact, 95% of respondents said that cybercriminals tried to
compromise their backups during the attack, with 71% being
successful – the second highest backup compromise rate across all
industry sectors. Having backups compromised also considerably
increases recovery costs, with the total bill coming in five times
higher in lower education and four times higher in higher
education.
Despite difficult dealings with ransomware, the overall attack
rate dropped over the last year. Sixty-three percent of lower
education organizations and 66% of higher education organizations
were hit by ransomware attacks – down from 80% and 79%,
respectively. At the same time, the rate of data encryption has
increased slightly, with eighty-five percent of attacks on lower
education and 77% of attacks on higher education organizations
resulting in data encryption, slightly up from the 81% and 73%,
respectively, reported in the 2023 survey. Unfortunately,
cybercriminals are not only encrypting data, they’re also stealing
it, using it as leverage to further monetize the attack. Twenty-two
percent of lower education organizations that had data encrypted
said the data was also stolen, together with 18% in higher
education.
The survey reveals that exploited vulnerabilities were the
leading root cause of attacks in education, providing
cybercriminals with a way into the network for 44% of lower
education and 42% of higher education ransomware attacks.
Based on this Sophos survey data, schools and other educational
organizations could benefit from a layered security approach that
includes vulnerability scanning and patching prioritization
guidance to reduce their attack surface, endpoint protection with
anti-ransomware capabilities that automatically detect and stop
attacks, and 24/7 human-led managed detection and response (MDR)
services to neutralize advanced human-led attacks, ideally
leveraging telemetry from backup solutions to detect and stop
adversaries before they can cause damage.
“While there appears to be some positive progress towards
combatting ransomware in the education sector, it’s concerning that
the rate of data encryption continues to increase year after year,
which suggests educational organizations need to continue working
towards improving their ransomware resilience. With stretched
resources and limited budgets, education organizations need to
focus on the controls that will have the greatest impact. With the
median ransomware recovery cost for education now hitting $3
million, it’s clear that investing in strong prevention and
protection solution can considerably reduce the overall financial
impact of cyber to educational organizations,” said Wisniewski.
Sophos’ report this year incorporates new areas of study:
insight into the role of law enforcement in ransomware remediation
for education providers. Ninety-nine percent of lower education and
98% of higher education organizations engaged with law enforcement
and/or official government bodies following a ransomware attack. As
a result, 64% of lower education organizations and 66% of higher
education organizations benefitted from advice about dealing with
the attack. Sixty-one percent of lower and higher education
organizations received help and support investigating the attack,
and nearly 49% of lower education organizations and 48% of higher
education organizations sought law enforcement’s help recovering
data encrypted in the attack.
Data for the State of Ransomware in Education 2024 report comes
from a vendor-agnostic survey of 600 cybersecurity/IT leaders
working in the education sector conducted between January and
February 2024. Respondents were based in 14 countries across the
Americas, EMEA, and Asia Pacific. All respondents represent
organizations with between 100 and 5,000 employees.
Read the full State of Ransomware in Education 2024 report on
Sophos.com for additional global findings and data by sector.
Learn More About Ransomware
- Turning the screws: The pressure tactics of ransomware
gangs
- The State of Ransomware 2024
- The effect of cyber insurance on the ransomware landscape
- The role of law enforcement in ransomware attacks
- The role of unpatched vulnerabilities in ransomware
attacks
- How often companies’ backups are compromised during ransomware
attacks
- The rise of remote encryption among ransomware groups
- Ransomware attackers targeting managed service providers (MSPs)
in the 2024 Sophos Threat Report: Cybercrime on Main Street
- The latest techniques, tactics and procedures (TTPs) of cyber
attackers in the Active Adversary Report for 1H 2024
- The evolving ransomware business model in Junk Gun’ Ransomware:
Peashooters Can Still Pack a Punch
- Sophos X-Ops and its groundbreaking threat research by
subscribing to the Sophos X-Ops blogs
About SophosSophos is a global leader and
innovator of advanced security solutions for defeating
cyberattacks, including Managed Detection and Response (MDR) and
incident response services and a broad portfolio of endpoint,
network, email, and cloud security technologies. As one of the
largest pure-play cybersecurity providers, Sophos defends more than
600,000 organizations and more than 100 million users worldwide
from active adversaries, ransomware, phishing, malware, and more.
Sophos’ services and products connect through the Sophos Central
management console and are powered by Sophos X-Ops, the company’s
cross-domain threat intelligence unit. Sophos X-Ops intelligence
optimizes the entire Sophos Adaptive Cybersecurity Ecosystem, which
includes a centralized data lake that leverages a rich set of open
APIs available to customers, partners, developers, and other
cybersecurity and information technology vendors. Sophos provides
cybersecurity-as-a-service to organizations needing fully managed
security solutions. Customers can also manage their cybersecurity
directly with Sophos’ security operations platform or use a hybrid
approach by supplementing their in-house teams with Sophos’
services, including threat hunting and remediation. Sophos sells
through reseller partners and managed service providers (MSPs)
worldwide. Sophos is headquartered in Oxford, U.K. More information
is available at www.sophos.com.
Contact: Samantha Powers, sophos@walkersands.com