Award Banner
Award Banner

More Than 60% of Successful Ransomware Attacks Sourced Through SaaS Applications According to New HYCU® Report

More Than 60% of Successful Ransomware Attacks Sourced Through SaaS Applications According to New HYCU® Report New Research Reveals Significant Gaps in SaaS Data Protection GlobeNewswire August 15, 2024

Boston, Massachusetts, Aug. 15, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- HYCU, Inc., a leader for modern data protection for on-prem, cloud services, and SaaS, and one of the fastest growing companies in the industry, today released new worldwide research highlighting critical vulnerabilities to SaaS data. The report, The State of SaaS Resilience in 2024, explores the cyber resilience of SaaS usage based on an independent survey of 417 IT decision makers across Europe, the United Kingdom, the United States, Japan, and Singapore.

The report reveals a number of troubling issues surfacing with the rise of SaaS application use. The sheer volume of SaaS applications in use across enterprises along with third party risk dependence and lack of awareness in the Shared Responsibility Model were a few items the report highlights beyond the rise of ransomware. As the research indicates, IT decision makers still are not aware of the exact number of SaaS applications in use across their organization, with twelve being the number most respondents felt they had. With research indicating that the average midsize enterprise has well over 200 SaaS applications across their IT environment[1], these gaps are quickly becoming the most significant challenges facing modern enterprises today. 

Key report findings include the following:

  • Business leaders often underestimate the scope of their SaaS data estate and were unaware of how many SaaS applications are in use across their enterprise.
  • 41% of respondents rely on the SaaS vendor to protect and recover their data—yet cloud providers, SaaS vendors or ISVs generally place responsibility for data protection and recovery on the customer according to the ‘Shared Responsibility Model’.
  • SaaS applications were the source of attack for 61% of ransomware breaches reported by survey respondents. 
  • 71% of respondents believe that IT is responsible for the lion’s share of SaaS usage even though these technologies are often bought and used by departments or lines of business. 
  • 90% of respondents said they are unable to recover encrypted SaaS data within an hour, risking costly business disruption.
  • 43% of respondents said they lack staff with the required skills to protect SaaS application data.
  • Three quarters of survey respondents said their businesses would be meaningfully impacted if their EntraID (formerly Azure Active Directory), SSO, and Identity Access Management (IAM) data were to suddenly become unavailable due to a cyberattack. 

The report also summarizes best practices to help organizations protect their SaaS data—and their businesses from the threat of cyberattacks. Insights to the report including how to take advantage of best practices for SaaS Data Protection will take place on August 22. Details are available at “The State of SaaS Resilience Broadcast.”

“The average business today relies on hundreds of SaaS applications for a variety of tasks, including business-critical workflows. Understanding how vulnerable SaaS data is to growing cyber threats is critical,” said Subbiah Sundaram SVP, Product, HYCU, Inc. “This new HYCU report illustrates that enterprises need to up their game in the area of SaaS data protection. As a leader in this space, HCYU stands ready to help organizations close the gaps that threaten their resilience, providing enterprise backup and recovery solutions specifically engineered for today’s SaaS-rich environments.”

A complimentary copy is available at The State of SaaS Resilience in 2024.

For more information on HYCU, visit:www.hycu.com, follow us on X (formerly Twitter), connect with us on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube. To learn more about HYCU R-Cloud, visit tryhycu.com.

###

About HYCU
HYCU is the fastest-growing leader in the multi-cloud and SaaS data protection as a service industry. By bringing true SaaS-based data backup and recovery to on-premises, cloud-native and SaaS environments, the company provides unparalleled data protection, migration, disaster recovery, and ransomware protection to thousands of companies worldwide. As an award-winning and recognized visionary in the industry, HYCU solutions eliminate complexity, risk, and the high cost of legacy-based solutions, providing data protection simplicity to make the world safer. With an industry leading NPS score of 91, customers experience frictionless, cost-effective data protection, anywhere, everywhere. HYCU has raised $140M in VC funding to date and is based in Boston, Mass. Learn more at www.hycu.com.  


[1] Zylo, 2022 SaaS Management Index Report


Don Jennings
HYCU, Inc.
617-791-1710
don.jennings@hycu.com

This business broadcast service is brought to you by GlobeNewswire through syndication. We have not reviewed or endorsed the content. For any corrections and clarifications, please send it to GlobeNewswire Contact Us Page. If you still require further assistance, please contact our support team at businessbroadcast@asiaone.com.

homepage

trending

trending
    Parents thank Park Seo-joon for donation that saved child: 'It was the first time in a long while our family laughed'
    Tan Kiat How weighs in on viral video of Gan Kim Yong being ignored by passers-by in Punggol
    GE2025: Campaigning solo the norm for 'very shy' independent Darryl Lo, but he doesn't mind
    Chee Hong Tat hopes to follow in Ng Eng Hen's footsteps in Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC, wants to serve until he retires
    'Criticise first, copy later': Chee Soon Juan accuses PAP of adopting SDP's policy ideas
    GE2025: WP's Andre Low apologises for 'inappropriate' language in leaked Telegram messages
    'We should avoid all that': Tan Cheng Bock responds to lively cheering contest between PSP and PAP supporters
    WP's Faisal Manap says Aljunied GRC residents can vouch he served 'fairly and equally'
    Lotte Mart Express opens at VivoCity with ramyun station, Korean street food and more
    GE2025: 11 rallies and closing Party Political Broadcasts on final day of campaigning
    Bot or not? Here's how to spot one during GE2025
    GE2025: Gan Kim Yong vows to serve Punggol residents even if he's asked to step down

Singapore

Singapore
    • 'PAP does not walk the talk': Pritam Singh hits back at PM Wong on 'negative politics'
    • Secondary school student arrested for cutting teacher with penknife
    • 'Ridiculous argument': SM Lee dismisses Pritam's claim that losing ministers will not weaken govt
    • RDU says campaign posters removed, repositioned or damaged; considering legal action
    • 'I have never left': Yee Jenn Jong on his 'one last' return as WP's East Coast candidate in GE2025
    • 'Your future will go down': Shanmugam calls out opposition's unrealistic promises
    • GE2025: What are the 7 rallies on April 30?
    • PM Wong 'taken aback' by WP's negative tone at rallies, asks who in WP will replace Gan Kim Yong in US tariff talks
    • PAP wants to confine opposition to NCMP scheme, says WP chief Pritam Singh
    • Mum cries while thanking migrant workers who saved daughter, 6, from River Valley fire

Entertainment

Entertainment
    • 'My acting wasn't going anywhere': Zhang Zetong was close to leaving showbiz before winning Star Award
    • 'Unlike other K-pop concerts': Small venue means Kiss of Life fans get intimate performance from girl group
    • Sora Ma responds to hate comments, including 1 accusing her of being 'happy' soon after husband's death
    • Ronald Cheng and wife in court over divorce and child support
    • Marvel asks to be removed from Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni legal battle over Nicepool character
    • Lily Allen apologises for 'being mean' to Katy Perry about Blue Origin space flight
    • Jeremy Renner had conversations with an imaginary Jamie Foxx following near-fatal snowplow accident
    • Nicole Kidman to receive Women in Motion Award at Cannes Film Festival
    • 'Some of them are super embarrassed of me': Jamie Oliver's children struggle with public's attention
    • 'Let your kids go. Don't expect anything of them,' Kate Hudson tells mothers

Lifestyle

Lifestyle
    • Local brands like Ann Chin Popiah and Tian Tian Hainanese Chicken Rice to open at 5-star hotel in Macau
    • 'It hurts, losing everything': Mentai-Ya boss closes all remaining stalls after $550k losses in 2 years
    • Kenny Rogers Roasters now has an all-you-can-eat buffet for $28.90++, here's a sneak peek at the menu
    • This new American malt shop along Joo Chiat Road looks like it came straight out of a Wes Anderson film
    • Pizza Hut to release limited-edition Cheeseburger Melts-inspired plushies from May 5
    • Crowds flock to supermarkets for Milo Singapore's limited-edition plushies; restocks for some items announced
    • New Scissor-Cut Curry Rice restaurant in Geylang to shutter after 30 years: 'There will be no successor or takeover'
    • Lotus Emeya S review: Breakthrough British electric sports sedan is a performance powerhouse
    • Zeekr X Flagship AWD review: More power and luxury with few compromises
    • COE prices end mixed in second bidding for April 2025, with Cat A and E seeing a slight increase

Digicult

Digicult
    • A $500 wake-up call: How the Samsung Galaxy Ring made me realise my stress
    • Monster Hunter Wilds producer explains how game has remained unique and fresh over 20 years
    • Google Pixel 9a: The best AI-centric phone under $800 in 2025?
    • Western intelligence agencies warn spyware threat targeting Taiwan, Tibetan rights advocates
    • Taiwan says China using generative AI to ramp up disinformation and 'divide' the island
    • Russian court fines Telegram app for refusal to remove anti-government content, TASS reports
    • One Beijing man's quest to keep cooking — and connecting with Americans — on camera
    • Nintendo Switch 2 to launch in June with US$449.99 price tag
    • Games in April: RPGs, racing and Ronaldo in a fighting game
    • Is it time to get a MacBook at a good price? The M4 MacBook Air says yes

Money

Money
    • Giant deal: Malaysian company to acquire Cold Storage and Giant supermarket chains in Singapore
    • GM delays investor call, UPS axes 20k jobs as Trump's tariffs create corporate chaos
    • India prepared to 'future-proof' trade deal as sweetener in US talks, sources say
    • UPS cuts 20,000 jobs, GM delays investor call as Trump's tariffs create corporate chaos
    • Profit warnings and uncertainty as Trump tariffs send a chill through businesses
    • Risk of global economic recession surges on US tariff shockwaves
    • World military spending hits $3.6 trillion in record 2024 surge
    • China warns countries against striking trade deals with US at its expense
    • Why we bought a $960k 2-bedder condo at Penrose during Covid-19: A buyer's case study
    • Why are recently MOP-ed 3-room HDB flats in Yishun fetching top prices?

Latest

Latest
  • Small, medium or large? Papal tailor keeps his options open
  • China to lift sanctions on EU Parliament members, official says
  • Swedish police detain 16-year-old murder suspect over Uppsala shootings
  • Man charged with terrorism offence after arrest at London's Israeli embassy
  • US backs Israel's ban on UNRWA Gaza aid operations at World Court
  • Putin is open to Ukraine peace but it cannot be achieved as fast as the US wants, Kremlin says
  • Alleged Australian mushroom murderer faked cancer diagnosis to lure victims, prosecutors claim
  • Hundreds of North Korean troops killed while fighting Ukraine, Seoul says
  • Russia begins building road bridge to North Korea, PM says

In Case You Missed It

In Case You Missed It
  • PSP's Tan Cheng Bock turns 85; SDP's Paul Tambyah joins celebration at Teban Gardens
  • PM Wong urges voters to 'choose leaders of good character' in PAP's first party political broadcast
  • It is 'important for Singapore's democracy' that WP wins more seats, says Pritam in election broadcast
  • GE2025: PSP, RDU, SDP, PPP, PAR, NSP promise to push for policy changes if elected to Parliament in first political broadcast
  • 'Everyone has the right to express their feelings': WP candidates address four-cornered fight in Tampines GRC
  • PAP's Desmond Lee responds to opposition's calls for GST exemption, says 'we want to make it progressive'
  • 'A fresher Pritam Singh': Teo Chee Hean to Aljunied resident who mistook PAP's Faisal Abdul Aziz for WP chief
  • SDP leaders criticise GST hike and govt vouchers: 'Give you cup of water to put out fire'
  • PAP has 'lost its way', say Tan Cheng Bock and Leong Mun Wai in PSP's first GE2025 rally
This website is best viewed using the latest versions of web browsers.