The research found that 61 percent of global organizations fell victim to ransomware in 2016 and ended up paying the fee demanded of them by the hackers.
Download the @CyberEdgeGroup 2017 Cyberthreat Defense Report sponsored by @Exabeam #cybersecurity https://t.co/ZD5RYGOnhH pic.twitter.com/gkN057rr4z
— Exabeam (@exabeam) March 8, 2017
54 percent of the companies said they refused to pay, but managed to recover their data, and 13 percent refused to pay up and as a result lost their data.
Ransomware, which describes a type of malicious software designed to block access to a computer system until a sum of money is paid, has increased over recent months.
This latest CyberEdge figures show that the overall percentage of organizations affected by successful cyberattacks reached an all-time high of 76 percent, which is an increase of 70 percent in their 2015 report.
Mike Rothman, president of Securosis, a computing company, believes that the increase in ransomware attacks is down to the sophistication of the technology used by the hackers.
"There are more attacks, more sophisticated malware, and more complexity ahead relative to skyrocketing cloud usage, all making it more challenging to execute on a security program," Mike Rothman said.
"This difficulty is compounded by the global security skills shortage and the ongoing inability for most employees to not click on links that compromise their devices," he added.
54% of organizations attacked by ransomware recovered data without paying ransom @CyberEdgeGroup 2017 CDR https://t.co/TDVb6JF78B pic.twitter.com/WmvwS51zwA
— CyberEdge Group (@CyberEdgeGroup) 8 March 2017
Rothman did say that on the positive front, budgets continue to increase and security initiatives are very high profile, consistently getting board room.
The research from CyberEdge also discussed the global shortage of skills within the cybersecurity industry.
2 in 5 organizations planning to acquire network deception technology in 2017 @CyberEdgeGroup 2017 CDR https://t.co/M3oQXxImjP pic.twitter.com/Jnl0ijtEpz
— CyberEdge Group (@CyberEdgeGroup) March 10, 2017
Nine out of ten respondents said that their firms were suffering from a lack of talent, and as a result, 51 percent of those questioned in the study said they were now using external vendors and contractors to fill the void.
Three quarters of organizations believe their levels of cyber insurance are adequate, with less than nine percent concerned about their coverage.