Between ransomware and month-long engagements, IR teams need a hug — and a nap
, show no sign of getting any better. According to the IBM report, 81 percent of responders say the rise of ransomware has exacerbated the stress and psychological demands required during incident response.
"They know that every minute a manufacturing assembly line is down it's costing significant amounts of money," he said."Everybody is aware of what's happening there, and everybody's looking for answers."The survey also asked respondents what attracted them to IR in the first place, and 77 percent cited a sense of duty to help and protect others ranked in their top three, followed by the continuous opportunity to learn and the opportunity to problem solve .
Meanwhile, individual IR jobs can now stretch to upwards of a month: 48 percent said the average is two to four weeks, while 30 percent said an average-length incident lasts more than four weeks. Additionally, 39 percent said the first three days responding to an attack are the most stressful, and 34 percent said they work more than 12 hours each day during the most stressful period of the cyber incident.
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