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Ponemon and Symantec Find Most Data Breaches Caused by Human and System Errors

MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA — (Marketwired) — 06/05/13 — Symantec Corp. (NASDAQ: SYMC) and the Ponemon Institute today released the which reveals human errors and system problems caused two-thirds of data breaches in 2012 and pushed the global average to $136 per record(1). Issues included employee mishandling of confidential data, lack of system controls, and violations of industry and government regulations. Heavily regulated fields including healthcare, finance and pharmaceutical incurred breach costs 70 percent higher than other industries.

The global cost per compromised customer record was up over the previous year, and the United States total cost per data breach incident was down slightly at $5.4 million. This decline was attributed to the appointment of chief information security officers (CISOs) with enterprise-wide responsibilities, comprehensive incident response plans, and stronger overall security programs.

: 2013 Cost of a Data Breach Study: Mistakes by people & systems caused most data breaches last year:

“While external attackers and their evolving methods pose a great threat to companies, the dangers associated with the insider threat can be equally destructive and insidious,” said Larry Ponemon, chairman, Ponemon Institute. “Eight years of research on data breach costs has shown employee behavior to be one of the most pressing issues facing organizations today, up 22 percent since the first survey.”

“Given organizations with strong security postures and incident response plans experienced breach costs 20 percent less than others, the importance of a well-coordinated, holistic approach is clear,” said Anil Chakravarthy, executive vice president of the Information Security Group, Symantec. “Companies must protect their customers- sensitive information no matter where it resides, be it on a PC, mobile device, corporate network or data center.”

The eighth annual global report is based on the actual data breach experiences of 277 companies in nine countries including the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, India, Japan, Australia, and Brazil. The nine country and global summary reports can be found at . All of the data breach incidents studied in the reports occurred in the 2012 calendar year. In order to properly track trend data, the Ponemon Institute does not include “mega data breaches” of more than 100,000 compromised records.

Companies can analyze their own risk by visiting which takes the organization-s size, industry, location and security practices into consideration for both a per record and an organizational estimate.

Additional key findings include:

. Many of these differences are due to the types of threats that organizations face, as well as the data protection laws in the respective countries. Some countries such as Germany, Australia, the United Kingdom and United States, have more established consumer protection laws and regulations to strengthen data privacy and cyber security. United States and Germany continue to incur the most costly data breaches (at an average cost per compromised record of $188 and $199 respectively). These two countries also had the highest total cost per data breach (United States at $5.4 million and Germany at $4.8 million).

. Together human errors and system problems account for 64 percent of data breaches in the global study, while shows that 62 percent of employees think it is acceptable to transfer corporate data outside the company and the majority never delete the data, leaving it vulnerable to data leaks. This illustrates the large extent to which insiders contribute to data breaches and how costly that loss can be to organizations. Brazilian companies were most likely to experience breaches caused by human error. Companies in India were the most likely to experience a data breach caused by a system glitch or business process failure. System glitches include application failures, inadvertent data dumps, logic errors in data transfer, identity or authentication failures (wrongful access), data recovery failures, and more.

. Consolidated findings show that malicious or criminal attacks cause 37 percent of data breaches and are the most costly data breach incidents in all nine countries. U.S. and German companies experience the most expensive data breach incidents caused by malicious or criminal attackers at $277 and $214 per compromised records, respectively, while Brazil and India had the least costly data breach at $71 and $46 per record, respectively. German companies were also most likely to experience a malicious or criminal attack, followed by Australia and Japan.

. U.S. and U.K. companies received the greatest reduction in data breach costs by having a strong security posture, incident response plan and CISO appointment. The U.S. and France reduced costs by engaging data breach remediation consultants.

Symantec recommends the following best practices to prevent a data breach and reduce costs in the event of one:

1. Educate employees and train them on how to handle confidential information.
2. Use data loss prevention technology to find sensitive data and protect it from leaving your organization.
3. Deploy encryption and strong authentication solutions.
4. Prepare an incident response plan including proper steps for customer notification.

Symantec protects the world-s information, and is a global leader in security, backup and availability solutions. Our innovative products and services protect people and information in any environment — from the smallest mobile device, to the enterprise data center, to cloud-based systems. Our world-renowned expertise in protecting data, identities and interactions gives our customers confidence in a connected world. More information is available at or by connecting with Symantec at: .

If you would like additional information on Symantec Corporation and its products, please visit the Symantec News Room at . All prices noted are in U.S. dollars and are valid only in the United States.

Symantec and the Symantec Logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Symantec Corporation or its affiliates in the U.S. and other countries. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

(1) The Ponemon Institute considers customer or consumer data (including payment transactional information), employee records, citizen, patient and student information as a data record. The cost per record is the average cost per compromised data record of direct and indirect expenses incurred by the organization.

Cassie Stevenson
Symantec Corp.
415-533-2720

Emily Butler
Connect PR
801-373-7888

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