SecurityBrief New Zealand - Technology news for CISOs & cybersecurity decision-makers
Story image
BlackBerry integrates ransomware recovery into collaboration platform
Tue, 7th Aug 2018
FYI, this story is more than a year old

BlackBerry has announced its new BlackBerry Workspaces content collaboration platform, featuring a new ransomware recovery capability that allows organisations to quickly recover from cyber attacks.

Despite the precautions an organisation can take, ransomware attacks can still happen.

Ransomware attacks were the most common type of malware in 2017, and its projected that by the end of 2019, a business will be hit by a ransomware attack every 14 seconds with the resulting damage costs predicted to reach $11.5 billion annually.

BlackBerry's new ransomware recovery feature helps organisations contain and limit the damage of ransomware attacks by freezing the accounts of affected users should their PC computers and synced files become infected.

Most ransomware recovery solutions enforce a company-wide rollback, meaning even users whose systems were not impacted may lose data.

With BlackBerry Workspaces, the administrator can check user logs to pinpoint exactly what workspaces, folders and files have been affected, and selectively roll impacted files back to pre-attack versions and without restrictions on how far back it can recover.

The ability to precisely remove just the infected files helps organisations avoid the loss of work and productivity that often come with system-wide recovery mechanisms.

BlackBerry enterprise products executive vice president Billy Ho says, “Beyond data loss, opportunity costs, and reputational risks, downtime resulting from ransomware attacks can inflict real harm on customers in any industry, including healthcare or public safety, where the consequences of any delay can be catastrophic.

“Organisations need to have a strong culture of security to minimise the risk of an attack – something that our Cybersecurity Consulting team has been supporting for the last several years.

“In a worst-case scenario, it's critical that organisations also have a layered defence model in place and an enterprise technology stack that is designed with the inevitable breach in mind,” he adds.

The new ransomware recovery feature will be available in the BlackBerry Workspaces Collaborate and Secure Plus editions at no additional cost.

Connected endpoints in the Enterprise of Things (EoT) have transformed how companies work, deliver goods and services and solve problems, but they also leave companies vulnerable to cyberattacks.

BlackBerry helps protect organisations from ransomware with various software offerings, including BlackBerry Workspaces, partnerships and deep integration with several mobile threat detection application vendors, and cybersecurity expertise through BlackBerry Cybersecurity Consulting.