security.txt
Cybersecurity statistics about security.txt
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Nearly half (47%) of organizations have no AI-specific security controls in place.
18% of enterprise PCs store sensitive data.
One severe outage per business per year, often driven by factors including cyberattacks, adds up to $160B globally.
8 in 10 users (80%) have seen reduced cloud operating costs through better identification of redundancies using open cloud security tools.
67% of organisations conduct cloud vulnerability assessments monthly or more frequently.
Only 21% of healthcare executives say they are investing significantly in software supply chain security.
54% of healthcare executives say they have very low to moderate visibility into the software supply chain.
85% of organisations still using manual processes are planning to automate within the next 12 months.
25% of healthcare executives say they are likely to invest in application security.
Nearly two-thirds (64%) of organizations lack full visibility into their AI risks.
Social engineering attacks (48%) and ransomware (34%) were the most common types of cyberattacks on healthcare organizations in the past year.
In healthcare, 52% of organizations cite compliance with AI regulations as a major challenge.
In the last three years, 73% of enterprises experienced a data leak.
For 17% of enterprises who experienced a breach or leak, data compromise was caused by redeployed devices or drives that still had sensitive data.
44% of organisations struggle to comply with new cloud security regulations.
Benefits of AI cloud use include Human augmentation (44%), Improved data protection (42%), and Strengthened threat detection and response capabilities (38%).
Critical patching for PCs running Windows 10 and 11 is delayed nearly two months on average across organisations.
It takes an average of 7.7 days, up to 30 days, to correlate alerts across cloud tools and organizational silos.
9 in 10 users (90%) agree open cloud security tools are a primary driver of innovation in their security programmes.
15% of healthcare executives say they are likely to invest in Zero Trust Architecture.