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Kroll: 3 out of 4 businesses in the Philippines have experienced a cyber attack

Published November 3, 2022

Kroll’s Latest Report Compares the State of Incident Response Across Australia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Philippines and Singapore

Kroll, the leading independent provider of global risk and financial advisory solutions, today announced its report State of Incident Response: Asia Pacific. The report finds that businesses in Asia Pacific and the Philippines are feeling the impact of cyberattacks, but many are yet to build appropriate response plans or have regular access to relevant cyber expertise. One of the notable findings is that 3 out of 4 businesses in the Philippines have experienced a cyberattack, much higher than the APAC average of 59%.

Kroll launched the State of Incident Response: Asia Pacific report which sets out how the APAC market has been impacted by cyber vulnerabilities, highlights cyber incident patterns for the region and proposes actionable priorities for the businesses

Key Philippine Findings:

Jay Gomez, Senior Vice President, Cyber Risk, Kroll, said: “Cyber attackers will seek out any country that has vulnerabilities, and we can see that all APAC markets are affected by this to an extent. 3 in 4 Philippine businesses have experienced a cyberattack, mostly because of malware and phishing scams. Despite the number of cyber incidents, many companies still do not have a response plan in place if an incident were to occur, which leaves companies at the risk of being unable to handle an incident effectively and of being vulnerable to further attacks. However, we are pleased to see a trend of businesses upgrading their software and training their employees as preventive measures, but businesses need to accelerate this further to better protect themselves, particularly on monitoring and detection.”

Ely Tingson, Senior Vice President for Cyber Threat Intelligence Philippines, Kroll, also shared: “As we become an increasingly more digital world, our regulatory landscape is understandably still evolving to better protect data of users. What is important now is that organizations in the Philippines are also able to evolve, for example, through a virtual chief information security officer (vCISO) program and through adopting a more proactive and resilient cyber security posture by engaging in cyber threat intelligence and incident response services to efficiently and effectively mitigate potential damage.”

Overall findings of the report include: 

Paul Jackson, Regional Managing Director of Asia Pacific, Cyber Risk, Kroll, said: “I am glad to see that businesses have focused on continuity and operational stability during the pandemic, but we continue to recommend that companies consider scaling up investment in cyber expertise to prepare for ‘when’ rather than ‘if’ an incident occurs. A combination of having mitigation measures brought about by considered investment in cyber security, together with a trusted cyber security advisor, will go a long way to reducing the impact of cyberattacks and enable businesses in Asia Pacific to recover more quickly. After all, the worst time to plan for an attack is during one.”

Local market variations include:

To understand how each market fared in the State of Incident Response: Asia Pacific report, read the full report with market breakdowns here

The report was commissioned by Kroll and conducted by Opinium. It surveyed 700 decision-makers in IT, risk, security and legal professionals evenly split across the following Asia Pacific markets: Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Philippines, Australia, Indonesia and Japan. 

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