Consumer Cybercrime Costs New Zealand $462.9 million
2012 Norton Study: Consumer Cybercrime Costs
New Zealand $462.9 million
Cost per victim
goes down; social and mobile incidents on the
rise
AUCKLAND, New
Zealand, 12 September 2012 – Norton by Symantec
today released the findings of its annual Norton Cybercrime Report, one of the
world’s largest consumer cybercrime studies. The study is
aimed at understanding how cybercrime affects consumers, and
how the adoption and evolution of new technologies impacts
people’s security. With findings based on self-reported
experiences of more than 13,000 adults across 24 countries,
the 2012 edition of the Norton Cybercrime Report calculates
the direct costs[1] associated with global consumer
cybercrime at US $110 billion[2] over the past twelve
months. In New Zealand it is estimated that more than
900,000 people fell victim to cybercrime in the past twelve
months, suffering NZ $462.9 million (US $370 million) in
direct financial losses.
Every second, 18 adults become a victim of cybercrime[3], resulting in more than one-and-a-half million cybercrime victims each day on a global level – with losses totaling an average of US $197 per victim across the world in direct financial costs. In the past twelve months, an estimated 556 million[4] adults across the world experienced cybercrime, more than the entire population of the European Union[5]. This figure represents 46 percent (39 percent in New Zealand) of online adults who have been victims of cybercrime in the past twelve months.
Changing Face of Cybercrime
This year’s survey shows an increase
in “new” forms of cybercrime compared to last year, such
as those found on social networks or mobile devices[6] - a
sign that cybercriminals are starting to focus their efforts
on these increasingly popular platforms. One in five online
adults (21 percent) has been a victim of either social or
mobile cybercrime, and 16 percent of social network users in
New Zealand have been victims of social cybercrime,
specifically:
• 13 percent of New Zealand
social network users reported someone had hacked into their
profile and pretended to be them.
• 1 in 10 New
Zealand social network users said they’d fallen victim to
a scam or fake link on social network platforms.
•
While 75 percent believe that cybercriminals are setting
their sights on social networks, only a third (36 percent)
actually use a security solution which protects them from
social network threats and only 49 percent use the privacy
settings to control what information they share, and with
whom.
• Almost 1 in 5 (19 percent) of New
Zealand mobile users received a text message from someone
they didn’t know requesting that they click on an embedded
link or dial an unknown number to retrieve a
“voicemail”.
“Cybercriminals are changing their tactics to target fast growing mobile platforms and social networks where consumers are less aware of security risks,” says Marian Merritt, Norton Internet Safety Advocate. “This mirrors what we saw in this year’s Symantec Internet Security Threat Report[7] which reported nearly twice the mobile vulnerabilities in 2011 from the year before.”
The 2012 Norton Cybercrime Report also reveals that most New Zealand Internet users take the basic steps to protect themselves and their personal information - such as deleting suspicious emails (91 percent) and being careful with their personal details online (81 percent).
However, other core precautions are being ignored. This year’s report also indicates that many online adults are unaware as to how some of the most common forms of cybercrime have evolved over the years and thus have a difficult time recognising how malware, such as viruses, act on their computer.
“Malware and viruses used to wreak
obvious havoc on your computer,” Merritt continues.
“You’d get a blue screen, or your computer would crash,
alerting you to an infection. But cybercriminals’ methods
have evolved; they want to avoid detection as long as
possible. This year’s results show that nearly half of
Internet users believe that unless their computer crashes or
malfunctions, they’re not 100 percent sure they’ve
fallen victim to such an attack.”
Strong Email Passwords Still
Key
Nearly one fifth (19 percent) of online
adults in New Zealand report having been notified to change
their password for a compromised email account. With people
sending, receiving, and storing everything from personal
photos (45 percent) to work-related correspondence and
documents (36 percent) to bank statements (19 percent) and
passwords for other online accounts (13 percent), those
email accounts can be a potential gateway for criminals
looking for personal and corporate information.
“Personal email accounts often contain the keys to
your online kingdom. Not only can criminals gain access to
everything in your inbox, they can also reset your passwords
for any other online site you may use by clicking the
‘forgot your password’ link, intercepting those emails
and effectively locking you out of your own accounts,”
says Adam Palmer, Norton Lead Cybersecurity Advisor.
“Protect your email accordingly by using complex passwords
and changing them regularly.”
For more findings from the Norton Cybercrime
Report globally and by country, please visit: http://www.norton.com/2012cybercrimereport
About Norton
Norton
protects the Stuff that matters to consumers, across all
aspects of their digital lives. Norton provides a range of
security solutions including technologies for PCs and mobile
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About Symantec
Symantec is a global leader in providing
security, storage and systems management solutions to help
consumers and organizations secure and manage their
information-driven world. Our software and services protect
against more risks at more points, more completely and
efficiently, enabling confidence wherever information is
used or stored. More information is available at www.symantec.com.
Norton Cybercrime Report
Methodology
Between July 16th, 2012 and July
30th, 2012, StrategyOne conducted online interviews with
13,000 adults, aged 18 to 64 from 24 countries (Australia,
Brazil, Canada, China, Colombia, Denmark, France, Germany,
India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand,
Poland, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa,
Sweden, Turkey, UAE, UK, USA).
The margin of error for
the total sample of adults (n=13018) is 0.9% at the 95%
level of confidence
1000 adult respondents were
interviewed in each of USA and India, 500 in other
countries. The global data has been weighted to ensure all
countries have equal representation of n500 adults.
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