Hacked university touts cyber insurance after $15,000 ransomware attack
Cyber insurance didn’t keep the University of Calgary from recently paying roughly $15,000 after being hit by hackers, but a college official said other schools should consider buying coverage after seeing first-hand how costly a cyberattack can be.
After school computers became infected with ransomware last month, the University of Calgary paid $20,000 Canadian to restore research data that had been seized by hackers.
Speaking publicly about the incident Friday afternoon, Linda Dalgetty, the university’s vice president of finance and services, credited a cyber insurance policy purchased last year with helping the school bounce back after email and other services were suspended due to ransomware — an increasingly popular type of malware that encrypts compromised files and holds them hostage until a payment is made to cybercriminals.
“In fact one of my messages coming out of this to my peers, both in Alberta and across Canada, is this is a good thing for you to have,” Ms. Dalgetty said, according to the CBC. “And again not just because it’s that monetary recovery, it’s the value that we had from helping us going through a difficult time with this malware crisis.”
Global consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers has predicted the cyber insurance industry will be worth $7.5 billion by the end of the decade, and Rep. John Ratcliffe — who chairs the House’s Subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Infrastructure Protection, and Security Technologies — recently called such policies a “valuable free-market tool in the ongoing effort to better defend ourselves against cyber risks.”
Read more:https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/jun/25/hacked-university-touts-cyber-policy-after-15000-r/