Voyage Tech Blogs

Voyage Technology has been serving the Beaver Dam area since 1999, providing IT Support such as technical helpdesk support, computer support, and consulting to small and medium-sized businesses.

A Look at this Year’s Worst Cybercrimes

A Look at this Year’s Worst Cybercrimes

It’s fair to say that today's organizations are faced with more online threats than ever before. To properly manage the information systems that they depend on for productivity, redundancy, and operational management, they need to ensure that they are doing what they need to do to mitigate problems stemming from the continuous flow of threats.

To give our readers just a taste of what they are up against, we’ve decided to put together a list of the most devastating hacks, infiltrations, and malware attacks that have happened so far in 2018. Additionally, we provide some telling statistics that will put into perspective just how important your network security and cybersecurity initiatives are.

Public
January

  • The Department of Homeland Security was affected by a data breach that exposed information about 247,167 current and former employees.

March

  • Atlanta, Georgia was targeted by a ransomware attack called SamSam. This resulted in a massive problem for their municipal infrastructure. The ransom price given was $51,000, but Atlanta’s leadership refused to meet these demands. Overall, the numbers show that Atlanta has spent more than 10 times that number in the fallout of the attack. Some estimates place the actual cost of this event at nearly $20 million.
  • India’s national ID database, Aadhaar, leaked data of over a billion people. This is one of the largest data breaches in history. A user could pay 500 rupees, equal to about $7, to get the login credentials that allowed anyone to enter a person’s 12-digit code for their personal information. For 300 rupees, or about $4.20, users could also access software that could print an ID card for anyone associated with the database.
  • Cambridge Analytica, a data analytics company that U.S. President Donald Trump used to help his campaign, harvested personal information from over 50 million Facebook users without asking for their permission. Facebook hasn’t called this a data breach, but Cambridge Analytica has since been banned from using the service thanks to this event.

June

  • A hack of a U.S. Government-funded active shooter training center exposed the personal data of thousands of U.S. law enforcement officials. This also exposed which police departments aren’t able to respond to an active shooter situation.

Private
January

  • 280,000 Medicaid records were exposed when a hacker attacked the Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences. Among the information exposed were patient names, provider names, and full names for affected individuals.

February

  • An unsecured server owned by Bongo International, a company acquired by FedEx, leaked over a hundred-thousand files of FedEx customers. Some of the information leaked included names, drivers’ licenses, national ID cards, voting cards, and utility bills.

March

  • Orbitz, a travel booking site, fell victim to a security vulnerability that exposed 880,000 customers’ payment card information. There was also about two whole years of customer data stolen from their server.
  • French news site L’Express left a database that wasn’t password-protected up for weeks, despite being warned about the security issues regarding this.
  • 134,512 records regarding patients and financial records at the St. Peter’s Surgery and Endoscopy Center in Albany, NY were accessed by hackers.
  • MyFitnessPal, an application used by Under Armor, exposed about 150 million people’s personal information to threats.
  • The WannaCry ransomware claimed another victim in Boeing, which stated that “a few machines” were protected by Microsoft’s 2017 patch.

May

  • Thanks to Twitter storing user passwords in a plaintext file that may have been exposed by internal company staff, the social media titan had to force hundreds of millions of users to change their password.
  • An unauthenticated API found on T-Mobile’s website exposed the personal information of all their customers simply through the use of their cell phone number. The following information was made available: full name, address, account numbers, and tax IDs.
  • A bug found in Atlassian development software titles Jira and Confluence paved the way for hackers to sneak into IT infrastructure of several companies and one U.S. government agency.
  • Rail Europe, a popular server used by American travelers to acquire rail tickets, experienced a three-month data breach that exposed credit card information to hackers.

June

  • A marketing company named Exactis had 340 million records stolen from it, but what’s most shocking about this is that they had accumulated information about nearly every American out there. In response to the breach, there was a class action lawsuit made against the company.
  • Adidas’s website was hacked, resulting in a loss of a few million users’ personal and credit card information.
  • A hacker collective called Magecart initiated a campaign to skim at least 800 e-commerce sites, including Ticketmaster, for sensitive information.

That list of traumatic security issues all occurred in the first half of 2018. This doesn’t consider the major hacks that are still affecting people from 2017 and before. Some examples include the Friendfinder hack that exposed 412 million user accounts, and the well-documented Equifax data breach that leaked the financial information of over 147 million people. Here are some of the statistics to help put in perspective the state of Internet threats at present:

  • In 2017 over 130 large-scale breaches were reported, a 27 percent increase over 2016.
  • Nearly 1-in-3 organization have experienced some sort of cyberattack in the past.
  • Cryptojacking (stealing cryptocurrency) increased 8,500 percent in 2017.
  • 100,000 organizations were infected with the WannaCry ransomware (400,000 machines).
  • 5.4 billion WannaCry attacks were blocked in 2017.
  • The average monetary cost of a malware attack is $2.4 million.
  • The average time cost of a malware is 50 days.
  • Ransomware cost organization’s over $5 billion in 2017.
  • 20 percent of cyber attacks come from China, 11 percent from the United States, and six percent from the Russian Federation.
  • Phone numbers are the most leaked information.
  • 21 percent of files are completely unprotected.
  • 41 percent of companies have over 1,000 sensitive files left unprotected.
  • Ransomware is growing at 350 percent annually.
  • IoT-based attacks are growing at about 500 percent per year.
  • Ransomware attacks are expected to quadruple by 2020.
  • 7.7 percent of web requests lead to malware.
  • There were 54 percent more types of malware in 2017 than there were in 2016.
  • The cybersecurity market will be worth over $1 trillion by 2025.

If this list is as scary to you as it is to us, you’ll do your best to secure your network, data, and infrastructure from Internet-based threats. For more information about how to facilitate a comprehensive cybersecurity strategy, call us today at 800.618.9844.

 

Comments

No comments made yet. Be the first to submit a comment
Already Registered? Login Here
Guest
Tuesday, 31 March 2026

Captcha Image

Sign Up For Our Newsletter!

Mobile? Grab this Article!

Qr Code

Tag Cloud

Security Technology Tip of the Week Best Practices Data Business Computing Business Productivity Software Innovation Cloud Hackers Hardware Efficiency Network Security User Tips Internet IT Services Malware IT Support Privacy Workplace Tips Google Email Computer Phishing Workplace Strategy Collaboration Hosted Solutions Small Business Backup Users Ransomware Managed Service Mobile Device Microsoft Productivity Passwords Quick Tips Saving Money AI Communication Cybersecurity Smartphone Data Backup Disaster Recovery Data Recovery Android Upgrade VoIP Business Management Smartphones communications Mobile Devices Windows Browser Social Media Managed IT Services Microsoft Office Current Events Network Tech Term Remote Internet of Things Information Artificial Intelligence Facebook Miscellaneous Holiday Automation Compliance Cloud Computing Gadgets Training Covid-19 Remote Work Server Managed Service Provider Outsourced IT IT Support Employee/Employer Relationship Encryption Spam Office Windows 10 Business Continuity Data Management Government Bandwidth Windows 10 Blockchain Virtualization Wi-Fi Business Technology Mobile Office Managed Services Data Security Vendor Apps Two-factor Authentication Tip of the week Chrome Budget Mobile Device Management Apple Networking Gmail Voice over Internet Protocol App WiFi BYOD Employer-Employee Relationship Avoiding Downtime Conferencing Marketing Managed IT Services How To BDR HIPAA Computing Physical Security Applications Information Technology Access Control Hacker Office 365 Analytics Office Tips Augmented Reality Website Retail Storage 2FA Password Bring Your Own Device Healthcare Big Data Operating System Router Risk Management Virtual Private Network Health Computers Help Desk Document Management Windows 11 Managed IT Service Telephone Scam Excel Data loss Firewall Cooperation Remote Workers The Internet of Things Going Green Patch Management Save Money Remote Monitoring End of Support Vulnerability Vendor Management Free Resource Social Project Management Cybercrime Windows 7 Display Microsoft 365 Printer Paperless Office Customer Service Solutions Infrastructure Monitoring Outlook Wireless Technology Machine Learning Money Saving Time Humor Holidays Maintenance Data Storage Downloads Word Supply Chain Antivirus Sports Video Conferencing Mouse Managed Services Provider Licensing Virtual Machines Professional Services Administration Entertainment Safety Robot iPhone Telephone System Cost Management Settings Wireless Vulnerabilities Printing Content Filtering Data Privacy IT Management YouTube Meetings Images 101 VPN Multi-Factor Authentication Mobility Cryptocurrency Modem Customer Relationship Management User Tip Processor Computer Repair Mobile Security Virtual Desktop Data storage LiFi Hacking Presentation Employees Smart Technology Integration SharePoint Addiction Electronic Medical Records Language Managing Costs Amazon eCommerce SSID Management Halloween Chatbots Screen Reader IP Address Writing Distributed Denial of Service Surveillance Virtual Assistant Outsource IT Lenovo Virtual Machine Environment Media Service Level Agreement Virtual Reality Computing Infrastructure Reviews Medical IT Hacks Server Management Scary Stories Private Cloud Identity Identity Theft Smart Tech Fun Development Recovery Transportation Small Businesses Superfish Bookmark Hypervisor Displays Deep Learning Download Twitter Alerts Hard Drives Shopping Domains Optimization PowerPoint Error Education Connectivity Social Engineering Break Fix Employer/Employee Relationships Outsourcing Browsers Navigation Upload Remote Computing PCI DSS Refrigeration Gig Economy Public Speaking Multi-Factor Security Workplace Mobile Computing Social Network Tablet IoT Lithium-ion battery Search Dark Web Internet Service Provider Teamwork Hiring/Firing Entrepreneur Evernote Paperless Best Practice Trends Alert Regulations Compliance Dark Data Google Calendar Memes Co-managed IT Managed IT Customer Resource management Buisness File Sharing Regulations IT solutions Star Wars How To Microsoft Excel Net Neutrality SQL Server Technology Care Legal Data Analysis History Business Communications Business Growth Gamification Notifications Staff Financial Data Undo Smartwatch Legislation IT Scams Travel Social Networking Techology Fileless Malware Google Maps Cortana Procurement Azure Hybrid Work Cyber security Tech Human Resources Alt Codes Content Wearable Technology Telework Downtime Unified Threat Management Motherboard CES Comparison Communitications Cables Health IT Unified Threat Management Directions Hosted Solution Assessment Permissions Supply Chain Management Application Term Google Apps Typing FinTech IBM Network Congestion Specifications IT Assessment IT Maintenance Google Drive User Error Microchip Internet Exlporer Knowledge Fraud Flexibility Value Business Intelligence Shortcuts Username Organization Point of Sale Digital Security Cameras 5G Black Friday Smart Devices Ransmoware Google Docs Unified Communications Database Experience Remote Working Memory Vendors Competition Data Breach Google Play Be Proactive Bitcoin Network Management Running Cable Tech Support IT Technicians Cookies Videos Monitors Cyber Monday Electronic Health Records Workforce Google Wallet Proxy Server Tactics Hotspot Wasting Time Threats Trend Micro Security Cameras Workplace Strategies Windows 8 Laptop Websites Mirgation Nanotechnology Software as a Service User Meta Drones

Blog Archive