Thu. Mar 28th, 2024

Content Assessment: Cyber Insurance and the Challenge of Cybersecurity

Information - 95%
Insight - 100%
Relevance - 90%
Objectivity - 95%
Authority - 95%

95%

Excellent

A short percentage-based assessment of the qualitative benefit of the post highlighting the research by RUSI on cyber insurance and cybersecurity challenges.

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Industry Research from RUSI* (Jamie MacColl, Jason R C Nurse, and James Sullivan)

Cyber Insurance and the Cyber Security Challenge

Cyber risk poses a complicated and growing challenge for governments, businesses, and consumers. Shared under Creative Commons License via the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI), the following paper explores cyber insurance’s potential contribution to solving this problem.

Executive Summary

Governments and Businesses are struggling to cope with the scale and complexity of managing cyber risk. Over the last year, remote working, rapid digitalization and the need for increased connectivity have emphasized the cyber security challenge. As the pursuit of approaches to prevent, mitigate and recover from malicious cyber activity has progressed, one tool that has gained traction is cyber insurance. If it can follow the path of other insurance classes, it could play a significant role in managing digital risk.

This paper explores whether cyber insurance can incentivize better cyber security practices among policyholders. It finds that the shortcomings of cyber insurance mean that its contribution to improving cyber security practices is more limited than policymakers and businesses might hope. Although several means by which cyber insurance can incentivise better cyber security practices are identified, they have significant limitations. Interviewees from across government, industry and business consistently stated that the positive effects of cyber insurance on cyber security have yet to fully materialize. While some mature insurers are moving in the right direction, cyber insurance as a whole is still struggling to move from theory into practice when it comes to incentivizing cyber security.

If this is to change, the insurance industry must overcome significant challenges. One is the competitiveness of the nascent cyber insurance market over the last two decades. Most of the market has used neither carrots (financial incentives) nor sticks (security obligations) to improve the cyber security practices of policyholders. The industry is also struggling to collect and share reliable cyber risk data that can inform underwriting and risk modeling. The difficulties inherent in understanding cyber risk, which is anthropogenic and systemic, mean insurers and reinsurers are unable to accurately quantify its causes and effects. This limits insurers’ ability to accurately assess an organization’s risk profile or security practices and price policy premiums accordingly. The specter of systemic incidents such as NotPetya and SolarWinds has also limited the availability of capital for cyber insurance markets.

However, the most pressing challenge currently facing the industry is ransomware. Although it is a societal problem, cyber insurers have received considerable criticism for facilitating ransom payments to cybercriminals. These add fuel to the fire by incentivizing cybercriminals’ engagement in ransomware operations and enabling existing operators to invest in and expand their capabilities. Growing losses from ransomware attacks have also emphasized that the current reality is not sustainable for insurers either.

To overcome these challenges and champion the positive effects of cyber insurance, this paper calls for a series of interventions from government and industry. Some in the industry favor allowing the market to mature on its own, but it will not be possible to rely on changing market forces alone. To date, the UK government has taken a light-touch approach to the cyber insurance industry. With the market undergoing changes amid growing losses, more coordinated action by government and regulators is necessary to help the industry reach its full potential.

The interventions recommended here are still relatively light, and reflect the fact that cyber insurance is only a potential incentive for managing societal cyber risk. They include: developing guidance for minimum security standards for underwriting; expanding data collection and data sharing; mandating cyber insurance for government suppliers; and creating a new collaborative approach between insurers and intelligence and law enforcement agencies around ransomware.

Finally, although a well-functioning cyber insurance industry could improve cyber security practices on a societal scale, it is not a silver bullet for the cyber security challenge. It is important to remember that the primary purpose of cyber insurance is not to improve cyber security, but to transfer residual risk. As such, it should be one of many tools that governments and businesses can draw on to manage cyber risk more effectively.


Complete Paper: Cyber Insurance and the Cyber Security Challenge (PDF) – Mouseover to Scroll

Cyber Insurance and the Cyber Security Challenge

Read the original overview and paper.

* Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI)

Note: The Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) is the world’s oldest and the UK’s leading defence and security think tank. Its mission is to inform, influence and enhance public debate on a safer and more stable world. RUSI is a research-led institute, producing independent, practical and innovative analysis to address today’s complex challenges.


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Source: ComplexDiscovery

 

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