Insurers focus on ransomware, user authentication as biggest risks

Insurers focus on ransomware, user authentication as biggest risks
The market for cybersecurity insurance coverage increased 61% in 2021 over the prior year, reaching $6.5 billion in premiums, according to the annual cyber insurance report issued by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. Although cyber insurance carriers are struggling to keep up with demand, some digital insurance platforms and cybersecurity advisors are identifying the biggest risks that should be addressed.

Damage from ransomware and liability for privacy breaches are two big cybersecurity risks that the insurance industry must address, according to executives of MOXFIVE, a cybersecurity advisory firm, and Embroker, a digital insurance platform. 

In the context of insurance, ransomware first became a big concern a couple years ago, according to Mike Wager, founder and CEO of MOXFIVE. That led to increased interest in endpoint detection and response (EDR), and multi-factor authentication (MFA), he says. EDR means installing software on every system at a company, including workstations, and virtual and physical servers. Yet, as stated in its recent “Insights” report for the first half of 2022, “MOXFIVE has seen many environments where EDR agents were not fully installed, even though the organization’s leadership thought that the technology was fully deployed.”

Two years later, now, showing that you have EDR in place is necessary to get a competitive quote for cybersecurity insurance, Wager says. Aside from the insurance coverage aspect, just having EDR, though, is not enough to ensure complete protection, according to Wager and MOXFIVE. 

Mike Wager_Moxfive.jpg
Mike Wager, founder and CEO of MOXFIVE

“Do you have the switches configured correctly? Are you protecting the front door, with all the controls and switches in the tool? Are you also protecting the back door?” he asked. His firm’s Insight report counsels that using a variety of data sources, including active network discovery scan results, is necessary to ensure all the systems in a company’s technical environment are protected.

Ransomware attacks became more sophisticated in the past two years, often encrypting companies’ back-up operations before engaging in a denial of service or other sabotage. In some cases, EDR, MFA and other security technologies such as Crowdstrike Falcon Prevent, Mandiant or Unit 42 were still insufficient. 

“The industry’s starting to get wiser and savvier, and we’re trying to help them understand how to ask a better question based on what’s actually happening,” Wager says. “It’s doing the work, but then taking a step back and trying to educate.”

David-Derigiotis Embroker.jpg
David Derigiotis, chief insurance officer, Embroker.

Cybersecurity insurance coverage has to address the aftermath of ransomware attacks, not only immediate disruptions. “There’s huge business interruption losses. There’s downtime having to restore all your systems, upgrade or put your hardware back in place if it’s been damaged. We’ll help a client through that entire process,” says David Derigiotis, chief insurance officer at Embroker, who is also a cybersecurity and data privacy expert.

Ideally, the subject of an attack wouldn’t have to pay a ransom, because they have the correct back-ups and can easily restore systems without an interruption of service, he added, but if that isn’t possible, Embroker tries to minimize the damage and business downtime.

Paige Adams - Zurich Insurance.jpg
Paige Adams, global chief security officer, Zurich Insurance

In the case of Zurich Insurance Group, an insurer itself realized its vulnerability, with about 100,000 endpoints to defend. Zurich turned to Tanium, a cybersecurity and systems management company that provided IT tools and solutions for security and operations. “We’ve been able to leverage Tanium in unique ways that fulfill use cases that sit in between IT ops team and our cyber response team,” said Paige Adams, global chief security officer at Zurich, in a statement. “This helps us resolve issues like internal misconfigurations, or to spin up a response effort to handle an IT severity incident.”

Jim Aldridge_Moxfive.jpg
Jim Aldridge, vice president of partnerships at MOXFIVE

Just as EDR has been created as a response to ransomware, so MFA security measures are intended to block compromised sign-in credentials, sometimes caused by social engineering intrusions. Having MFA in place is now usually a prerequisite for cybersecurity coverage, according to Wager of MOXFIVE. Along with MFA, companies must understand what accounts have access to their virtual private networks, added Jim Aldridge, vice president of partnerships at MOXFIVE. When hackers can’t find vulnerabilities in networks, compromising an identity is their next means of doing damage, he says.

As Adam Gladsden of Swiss Re said previously, loss ratios in cybersecurity coverage are decreasing as ransomware claims also dropped, easing pressure on premium rates. Overall, the cybersecurity insurance market is growing, and premium rates are dropping after having risen last year, according to Wager of MOXFIVE. 

“The claims volume did go down and the severity of the claims did go down, meaning the insurance carriers found a way to be more profitable,” he said. “One could argue they figured out how to underwrite this better.”

Source: Insurance Innovation Reporter

Share this article: