[FSec] Getting Hacked Out of Business

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DigiNotar — the CA that got hacked — announced bankruptcy yesterday (read the release).

This is a very clear case where a company folded because it was hacked.

However, this is not the first time something similar has happened.

Earlier this year an Australian hosting provider called Distribute.IT was badly hacked and had no recoverable backups (read the full story). As a result, the company folded and the customer base was acquired by a competitor.

companies_that_folded_under_hacking.png


Victims of wide-spread and long-lasting distributed denial-of-service attacks include an ISP called Cloud 9 Communications (read more) and an antispam outfit called Blue Frog (Wikipedia entry). In effect, spammers forced Blue Frog out of business.

So does getting hacked always equal going out-of-business? Well, no, not always.

Sony's PlayStation Network was severely hacked earlier this year, but they're still in business. So what's the difference between Sony and these other guys? Well size is notoriety for one thing. Sony was so publicly humiliated that public opinion actually turned against the hackers, and gave Sony some time to recover its footing.

DigiNotar, Distribute.IT, Cloud 9 and Blue Frog weren't big enough for all the details to come out during their troubles — and they failed to win public opinion (trust) as a result, and then they suffered the consequences. It's something that all smaller companies should take into consideration and prepare for.

Or else, they could be the next one to be forced out of business.
On 21/09/11 At 12:54 PM

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