World Backup Day stories
Many firms still fail recovery tests, leaving cyber attacks or outages able to halt services and expose critical data.
Only 42% of Australian organisations back up all workloads, leaving many exposed when ransomware or hardware failures hit.
The rise of artificial intelligence in Australia is set to drive organisations to invest nearly AUD $6.2 billion in information security by 2025, amidst rising data risks.
World Backup Day highlights the data protection challenges facing Australia's 2.5 million SMBs, with growing cloud reliance but concerning backup gaps.
Hidden software and poorly protected backups are leaving businesses more exposed to automated ransomware attacks, security experts warned.
Ransomware is exposing backup gaps that can leave firms unable to restore critical services quickly enough to meet regulators’ deadlines.
Many UK organisations still cannot prove they can restore vital systems quickly if ransomware, cloud outages or device failures strike.
Untested restore drills could leave firms facing longer outages, lost revenue and reputational damage when ransomware or system failures hit.
Rising data volumes and AI are forcing Australian firms to cut storage waste, tighten governance and test backups before breaches hit.
Many firms still lack recoverable copies of critical data as ransomware increasingly targets cloud and SaaS systems, experts warn.
Many enterprises still cannot prove they can restore data quickly enough as cloud, container and AI systems outpace traditional backup plans.
World Backup Day prompts warnings that untested restores and AI-era data demands are leaving mid-sized firms dangerously exposed.
World Backup Day now warns boards that backup is no mere IT chore, but a frontline defence against ransomware targeting recovery itself.
World Backup Day now spotlights recoverability and data integrity as AI, cloud volatility and flash costs reshape corporate storage priorities.
As World Backup Day concludes, cybersecurity expert Sean Deuby stresses the importance of daily data protection practices to stave off severe business disruptions.
As AI-driven cyber threats escalate, experts urge businesses to enhance backup strategies, emphasising the need for strong data protection against ransomware.
As World Backup Day nears, tech experts warn that enhancing data protection and connectivity is crucial amidst rising cyber threats and ransomware attacks.
On World Backup Day, Apricorn warns of rising ransomware threats as incidents surged 11% in 2024, stressing the dire need for secure data backups.
Despite widespread AI backups, just 39% of UK businesses are fully confident they could recover cloud data after a cyberattack.
AI disruptions and cyberattacks are forcing organisations to back up models, prompts and knowledge bases, not just files.