40% of IT execs do not monitor databases for suspicious activity
Fact recorded on: June 13, 2007. Categories: Security.
40% of IT execs told Gartner their organizations don’t monitor their databases for suspicious activity, or don’t know if such monitoring occurs. 78% believe that databases are either critical or important to their business. Customer data represents the most common data type contained within these databases.
Latest Security facts
- 7.5% of Americans victims of financial fraud in 2008
- 42% of organizations reported unauthorized access to their Active Directory
- Top concerns regarding cloud computing services
- UK cybercrime up 9% in 2007
- US managed security services market grew 19.6% in 2007
- 21% of CIOs expect their security budgets to increase
- US online households pay 11 bills a month online
- 74% of all e-mail in Q2 2008 was spam
- Virtualization growth rising from 46% in 2007 to 54% in 2008
- Total spending in network services to reach $9.1 bln in 2012 in Asia
- $8.5 bln lost to viruses and spyware in 2006-2007
- Australian identity and access management market generated $89.4 mln in 2007
- 32% of North American SMBs have been hit by cybercrime numerous times
- Total spending in network services will grow to $9.1 bln in 2012
- Malware rates up 278% in the first half of 2008
- 51% of Americans write down their online passwords
- 45% of US employers monitor employee computer usage and keystrokes
- 66% of US employees write down passwords in unsafe places
- 55% of online shoppers think about payment methods when checking out
- Top malware countries: Russia, China, US, Brazil, UK
- Low-income Americans more worried about online credit card security than high-income
- 63% of Americans use roughly the same password for different online accounts
- 5.49 mln unique samples of malicious software in 2007
- 50% of companies block some of Web 2.0 services
- 57% of Americans still very concerned with credit card safety online
- UK SMB spending on managed security reached $42 mln in 2007
- IM attacks: 45% on MSN Messenger, 20% on Yahoo! IM, 19% on AIM
- $3.2 bln lost to phishing in 2007
- Chinese video surveillance market to reach $484.3 mln in 2013
- 9% of kids harassed online in 2005
- Vehicle tracking systems to generate $86 mln in China in 2007
- 90% of security attacks can be avoided without increase in security spending
- Remote household monitoring to grow at 25% a year
- Security software spending in Europe to reach $3.3 bln in 2007
- CCTV surveillance market to grow 12.4%
- Security software market to generate $13.5 bln in 2011
- Malware damages down to $13.3 bln in 2006
- 40% of IT execs do not monitor databases for suspicious activity
- Security appliance market to generate $5.5 bln by 2011
- 60 mln consumer electronics devices to ship with hardware security by 2013
- IT security spending by small businesses to reach $1.7 bln in 2007
- 60% of large European companies do not adequately use encryption
- Young salespeople the worst IT security offenders
- Security market up 7.2% in 2006
- UK SMBs to spend $2.2 bln on data storage and security
- $28.5 bln will be spent on homeland security in 2007-2011
- Video surveillance to generate $1 bln in 2010 in the US
- $9.1 bln will be spent on IT systems defense tools in 2007
- 77% of US consumers willing to change banks for better protection policy
- 40% of US consumers confident medical organizations can provide adequate security for healthcare records