Most Americans Worry about Data Breaches but Disagree about the Need for Private Companies to Notify Government about Cyber Attacks

Published: 5 June 2013 y., Wednesday

According to new research conducted by Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS), a majority of Americans are concerned about data breaches involving large organizations, but are evenly mixed on whether legislation should require private businesses to share cyber attack information with the government.

Results from the Unisys Security Index, which regularly surveys more than 1,000 Americans on various areas of security concern, showed high levels of concern about data breaches among Americans. Respondents to the survey said they were most worried about data breaches hitting their banks and financial institutions, with two-thirds (67 percent) reporting concern. A majority of Americans surveyed also reported concern about data breaches involving government agencies (62 percent), health organizations (60 percent) and telecommunications and Internet service providers (59 percent).  

Findings released last month from the same survey also showed most Americans harbor some level of concern about identity theft (83 percent) and credit card fraud (82 percent), both of which can arise from breaches at large organizations.

Despite these concerns, Americans polled were split on whether federal legislation to strengthen the country’s cybersecurity defenses should require organizations like banks, utilities and healthcare organizations to disclose breaches to the government. 

Roughly half (48 percent) of respondents said they do not believe private businesses should be forced to disclose and share cyber attack intelligence, but a similar proportion (46 percent) said they think Congress should pass cybersecurity legislation mandating that the private sector share cyber-attack information with the government.

The poll was undertaken in March, via 1,006 telephone interviews, approximately a month before the controversial Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) was passed by the United States House of Representatives. CISPA is not expected to be considered by the Senate this year, and many point to a lack of consensus on its information-sharing requirements as the reason.

“Americans clearly see a need for stronger methods to prevent cyberattacks, and many see a natural role for government in that process, but they differ on precisely how government and the private sector should interact in that regard,” said Steve Vinsik, vice president of enterprise security for Unisys. “Regardless of where the legislation ends up, businesses and government agencies need to realize that the costs of breaches far outweigh those of prevention - and that Americans are paying close attention.”

Šaltinis: unisys.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Unisys Corporation Names Tom Patterson to Lead Global Security Solutions Business

Unisys Corporation today announced that Tom Patterson has joined the company as vice president for global security solutions, responsible for leading Unisys' security solutions business worldwide. more »

Related videos

05/02/2014

Padėkime augti

Motorola's Moto 360 smartwatch expected to be released in July

Moto 360, Motorola's upcoming entry into the smartwatch industry, is rumored to be preparing for a July release. more »

Choreographer from Unisys helps organisations better manage their Cloud resources

Unisys Corporation has announced Choreographer, a cloud management platform designed to direct and optimise key IT services and processes. Choreographer automates the lifecycle management of data centre and public infrastructure resources to help more efficiently deploy applications in both private and public cloud environments. more »

The world’s largest mobile technology exhibition “Mobile World Congress 2014” shall take place in Barcelona

This February 24-27, the world’s largest mobile technology exhibition “Mobile World Congress 2014” shall take place in Barcelona. more »

Unisys Announces Third-Quarter 2013 Financial Results

Unisys Corporation reported a third-quarter 2013 net loss of $11.6 million, or a loss of 26 cents per diluted share, which included $22.6 million of pension expense. In the third quarter of 2012, the company reported a net loss of $12.4 million, or a loss of 28 cents per diluted share, which included $28.9 million of pension expense and $23.1 million of debt reduction charges. more »

Akamai and Cisco Working Together to Optimize Application Delivery for Enterprise Branch Offices over Hybrid WAN

Akamai Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: AKAM), the leading provider of cloud services for delivering, optimizing and securing online content and business applications, today announced plans for future integration of Akamai Unified Performance technology into the Cisco® ISR-AX series of routers. more »

Xbox One to welcome indie games makters

Microsoft is to allow independent games developers to self-publish on its Xbox One games console. "Indies" will be able to create their own games, publish to the Xbox when they like, and set their own pricing, the computer giant has confirmed. more »

Nokia Lumia 625 packs 4G and 4.7-inch screen

Nokia has unveiled the Lumia 625, the largest Lumia Windows Phone yet, with a 4.7-inch screen and 4G. more »

Unisys to Offer Unisys Stealth Solution for Amazon Web Services

Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS) announced the availability of its Unisys Stealth Solution for Amazon Web Services (AWS) designed to enhance security for clients moving data into the cloud. more »

Open IPTV Forum publishes HTML5 profile for Connected TVs

The Open IPTV Forum (OIPF) has published a profile of HTML5, CSS, DOM3 and other related web technologies aimed at connected TV services and devices that implement a browser-based application environment. more »

Most Americans Worry about Data Breaches but Disagree about the Need for Private Companies to Notify Government about Cyber Attacks

According to new research conducted by Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS), a majority of Americans are concerned about data breaches involving large organizations, but are evenly mixed on whether legislation should require private businesses to share cyber attack information with the government. more »