"Around 72 per cent of Indian companies faced cyber attacks this year alone. 94 per cent respondents indicated that cyber-crime is a major threat faced by organisations, but surprisingly only 41 per cent indicated that it forms part of the board agenda," the KPMG Cybercrime Survey Report 2015 prepared by KPMG in India, a professional services firm, said.
The survey report was released in the presence of Mumbai Police Commissioner Ahmed Javed here today.
City police commissioner urged the companies to approach police instead of leaving such incidents go unreported.
"The reason for this (incidents being unreported), usually, is that the company is afraid of its reputation being spoilt in the market or his shares might come down," said Javed.
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The Mumbai police has a dedicated cyber police station and is continuously strengthening itself by undertaking trainings to deal with cyber-crime cases, he informed.
Mritunjay Kapur, Partner and Head, Risk Consulting, KPMG
in India, said, "The last few years have seen multifold increase in cybercrimes across regions and sectors. Given the proliferation of connected technologies, organisations today face a significant challenge to be resilient against cyber-attacks and incidents."
"It is also important that the management realises that these are no longer a one-time phenomenon. The nature of cybercrime is constantly evolving, specifically with attackers having a solid arsenal of the ever evolving stealth attack," he said.
"These cyber-frauds, by nature, are complex and difficult to detect. Organisations need to strengthen their cyber incident response process along with building strong prevention and detection systems. Cyber forensics, therefore, is becoming a critical component of fraud investigations," Bahl added.