UK manufacturers under cyber fire with 80% reporting attacks
Briefly

UK manufacturers under cyber fire with 80% reporting attacks
"According to security outfit ESET, 78 percent of UK manufacturers admit to suffering at least one cyber incident in the last 12 months, with more than half reporting lost revenue as a result. These aren't minor hiccups either. In more than half of the worst incidents, losses surpassed £250,000, because when something breaks digitally, the production line usually follows suit."
"The sector got a high-profile reminder of the stakes last year when Jaguar Land Rover was forced to halt production following a cyberattack that rippled across its supply chain. The disruption dragged on for weeks, with estimates putting the wider economic hit at around £1.9 billion once suppliers, delays, and lost output were factored in."
"Despite that, visibility into risk remains patchy. One in five manufacturers said they have limited or no insight into the cybersecurity threats that could knock production offline, a blind spot that's increasingly hard to justify as attacks evolve."
"Nearly half of respondents now see AI-assisted attacks as the top threats over the next year, ahead of phishing and ransomware - a sign that the tooling on both sides of the fence is getting more sophisticated."
Research indicates that 78% of UK manufacturers faced at least one cyber incident in the last year, with significant revenue losses reported. Major incidents often exceed £250,000 in losses, disrupting production lines. The Jaguar Land Rover cyberattack exemplified the severe economic impact, with estimated losses around £1.9 billion. Most manufacturers acknowledge direct operational impacts from cyber incidents, with many lacking insight into potential threats. AI-assisted attacks are now viewed as the top threat, indicating a shift in the sophistication of cyber threats.
Read at Theregister
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]