Another month, another data breach, and another set of proposals for what is seemingly an intensifying cyberattack problem.
When we examine the evidence, though, the actual expenses from the recent and high-profile breaches at Sony, Target and Home Depot amount to less than 1% of each company’s annual revenues. After reimbursement from insurance and minus tax deductions, the losses are even less.
This indicates that the financial incentives for companies to invest in greater information security are low and suggests that government intervention might be needed.
To date, though, few of the policy proposals aimed at improving information security are directed towards the root cause of this problem. Rather than creating incentives for companies to invest in better information security, the Australian, UK and US government proposals are for more information sharing than securing. In all cases, this sharing is to be done with intelligence agencies. Why is this and what does it tell us about what the real threat to our information is?
The now infamous Sony breach supposedly perpetrated by North Korea at the end of 2014 drew initial loss estimates of more than US$100m. In the end, the breach did not actually cost Sony very much at all.
In its Q3 2014 financial statements, the company wrote that the breach resulted in “just $15m in ‘investigation and remediation costs’ and that it doesn’t expect to suffer any long-term consequences”.
A senior general manager later said the figure would be closer to $35m for the fiscal year ending 31 March.
To give some scale to these losses, they represent from 0,9% to 2% of Sony’s total projected sales for 2014 and a fraction of the initial estimates.
How about costs like reputation damage and lost sales? Sony’s bottom line actually wasn’t hurt by the hack. Consider that around a quarter of the typical movie budget is marketing. The Interview cost $44m to make, which implies a conservative estimate of $11m for marketing. This amount was likely ratcheted down following the breach and the subsequent free worldwide media frenzy.
The film made a profit and has so far grossed $40m in online sales and $6,7m in cinemas worldwide. If anything, the free publicity for a new movie on cable news, across social networks and daily newspapers, at Christmas to boot, represents a net financial benefit to Sony. There’s no such thing as bad press, after all.
Target was also subjected to a particularly nasty data breach in late 2013 involving 40m credit and debit card records and 70m other records (including addresses and phone numbers).
In its latest financial statements, Target said the gross expenses from the data breach were $252m. When we subtract insurance reimbursement, the losses fall to $162m. If we subtract tax deductions (yes, breach-related expenses are deductible), the net losses tally $105m. This is the equivalent of 0,1% of 2014 sales.
Finally, Home Depot suffered a breach last year that resulted in 56m credit and debit card numbers and 53m e-mail addresses being stolen.
The net expenses incurred by Home Depot ended up at $28m following an insurance reimbursement of $15m. This represents less than 0,01% of Home Depot’s sales for 2014.
These numbers suggest that we have a market failure relating to asymmetric information, which results in the problem of “moral hazard” for private companies in the area of information security. Moral hazard occurs when one person or organisation takes greater risks because others bear the burden or costs of those risks.
For an example, credit and debit card providers incurred the most costly part of the Home Depot breach. Credit unions claim to have spent $60m in September 2014 alone replacing compromised cards. Each customer whose card had to be replaced also incurred a cost in terms of inconvenience.
It therefore does not make economic sense for companies like Home Depot to make large investments in information security. As a result, they do not. The insurance pay-outs and tax deductible breach-related expenses weaken the incentives even more.
Reliable data on the amounts companies spend on information security are scarce. However, due to the nature of their business and the vital role that information security plays in it, we know that banks and financial institutions are some of the biggest investors in robust information security.
JP Morgan’s CEO, Jamie Dimon, says his firm spends $250m each year on cybersecurity. To put that in perspective, that constitutes 0,35% of the JP Morgan’s annual expenses.
If that’s how much a firm whose very existence rests on preventing data breaches, one can only imagine how much the average firm invests in information security.
Government proposals
In the presence of this market failure, the case for government intervention becomes strong. When we look at the proposals currently on offer, though, rather than better securing information they seek to increase access to it — for certain organisations only.
The most recent of these proposals in Australia is the mandatory metadata retention scheme. This will involve retaining and sharing people’s metadata for two years (representing an additional information security risk in of itself due to the centralisation of information), cost A$400m/year and be overseen by the nation’s intelligence agencies. According to prime minister Tony Abbott, if not passed, this will represent a “a form of ‘unilateral disarmament’ in the fight against crime”. (These crimes include, “cyberattacks, child exploitation, terrorism activity and other crimes”.)
To try and put this spending in perspective, figures released by the Western Australian government suggest that $17m was lost to online scammers last year. If we scale this up to the total Australian population and add the $254m lost to online (“card not present”) credit and debit card fraud nationally in 2013, the total losses from these online crimes still don’t exceed the yearly cost of Abbott’s proposal! There must be some other reason to justify this spending.
One possible answer: in 2010, one of same the agencies within the Australian intelligence community that is proposed to oversee the metadata retention scheme “obtained nearly 1,8m encryption keys from Indonesian telecommunications operator Telkomsel”, for the purposes of “conducting surveillance of a US law firm retained by the Indonesian government for trade talks”. This last phrase suggests that the real value in greater information sharing with intelligence agencies does not come from fighting online crimes.
In the US, President Barack Obama recently announced a Cyber Threat Intelligence Integration Centre. Tasked with facilitating information sharing between private and public sector entities, it will start with a budget of $35m and will be overseen by the director of national intelligence. Information security experts widely agree this will not significantly reduce data breaches.
Prime Minister David Cameron also has proposals to combat cybercrimes ranging from banning encryption in the event the government has no backdoor to decrypt communications (again, something that would undermine the security instead of improving it) to a number of information sharing measures between the UK and US. This would include “establishing a joint cyber cell” between the UK’s Government Communications Headquarters and MI5 and their US partners, the National Security Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
These organisations already collaborate quite a bit and it is not for improving information security. The news broke two weeks ago that operatives from the NSA and GCHQ “joined forces in April 2010 to crack mobile phone encryption” by stealing billions of encryption keys from Dutch Sim card provider Gemalto. This has some of the biggest negative repercussions on information security we’ve ever seen to everyone, globally.
More questions than answers
Given that the losses to companies due to data breaches are so low, typically less than 1% of a company’s annual sales, and the losses so widely distributed, why are so many costly proposals being made by governments around the world to do something about the online threat?
The presence of moral hazard does suggest that there is a role for government to play in creating incentives for private companies to invest more in information security.
Why then do none of the current crop of government proposals address this problem? More costly than the problems they supposedly address, if anything, they create a disincentive for companies to make this needed investment by promising blanket protection from cyber-attacks. The Australian and UK proposals may actually degrade information security by centralising data and undermining encryption.
This might be exactly the point, though, when we look at which agencies are to be engaged in these proposals.
Improving information security should fundamentally involve securing information, yet all the current proposals involve greater information sharing with intelligence agencies. Why are the same agencies that have been shown to be active in undermining the information security of private firms such as Indonesia’s Telkomsel or the Dutch Gemalto — and all of their customers (anyone with a cellphone – so all of us) — as a consequence of these actions, being tasked with better securing our information?
If we don’t identify and address these contradictions, we run the risk of creating something much worse than the current information security problem. The latest slew of government proposals raise more questions than answers regarding information security — and they are very concerning questions indeed.
- Benjamin Dean is fellow for Internet governance and cybersecurity at the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University
- This article was originally published on The Conversation
- Read: SA gov’t gearing up for cybercrime threat