The True Dangers of Data Breaches

Feb 14, 2023 | Blog, Cyber Security

The True Dangers of Data BreachesDue to the global remote work environment and international cyberwarfare, data breaches have never been more dangerous — and now – even more commonplace. But do we fully understand why they’re so dangerous?

Even when you set aside the ways in which data breaches affect individuals on a personal level — and even when you set aside the fact that they could allow a nation-state threat actor to steal classified information and commit espionage against U.S. government entities — data breaches have the potential to severely disrupt, if not outright destroy, organizations and businesses of all sizes. This article outlines the various ways in which data breaches can harm your company and why cybersecurity needs to be top-of-mind in everything you do.

The Financial Cost of a Data Breach

The True Dangers of Data BreachesThe sheer financial cost of a data breach is likely one of the most immediate and apparent consequences. According to a new report from IBM, the cost of a data breach has risen more than 14% over the past five years. These costs can include compensating those who have been affected, the actual response efforts, the investigation of the breach itself, new security measures that must be put in place after the breach, and the legal fees post-breach. For those who operate outside the United States, there are also steep financial penalties that come with non-compliance with the General Data Protection Regulation. A breach can significantly impact a company’s share price and overall stock value.

Finally, reputation means everything in business. Research has shown that up to a third of customers in retail, finance and healthcare will stop doing business with organizations that have been breached. If your customers don’t feel like their data or worse, their money is safe with your organization, your business’ bottom-line will undoubtedly suffer. Additionally, research has shown, 85% of consumers will tell others about their experience, and 34% will take to social media to vent their anger about your brand. All of these factors together add up to a major impact on your business and your company’s bottom line. The costs can be immeasurable.

Downtime and Your Bottom Line

In the aftermath of a data breach, business operations can be heavily disrupted. Organizations must take the necessary steps to contain the breach and then conduct a thorough investigation into how it occurred and which systems were accessed. Operations may have to be completely shut down until investigators get all the answers they need. This process can take days or even weeks, depending on the severity of the breach. This downtime can have a drastic impact on a company, and even potentially put some people out of work entirely.

Lawsuits and Criminal Charges

Under data protection regulations, organizations are legally bound to demonstrate that they have taken all the necessary steps to protect personal data. If certain data is compromised, such as personal identifying information (PII), whether it’s intentional or not, individuals can choose to seek legal action to claim compensation. And if an organization is shown to have not taken the appropriate steps to secure the data they were entrusted with, they have been held accountable for such breaches.

The responsibility falls on the consumer to keep their data secure, but today, they expect businesses to also keep their data safe. The question then becomes whether or not you’re prepared for the fallout should you disregard your security obligations.

Contact Us

Don’t let a data breach affect your bottom line and reputation. Instead, rest easy at night knowing your business and consumer data is secure with a trusted group of IT professionals working round-the-clock keeping your information and systems secure. Give V2 Systems a call and set up a free two-hour consultation.

 

Since 1995, Manassas Park, VA-based V2 Systems has employed local systems administrators, network engineers, security consultants, help desk technicians and partnering companies to meet a wide range of clients’ IT needs, from research, to implementation, to maintenance. Concentrate on your VISION…We’ll handle the TECHNOLOGY!

More From V2 Systems

Downtime Is a Cybersecurity Problem, Not Just an IT Problem

Downtime can affect payroll, customer service, compliance, productivity, revenue, and reputation. For small businesses and government contractors, outages are no longer just technical issues. This blog explains why downtime should be treated as a cybersecurity and business resilience problem, and how organizations can better prepare for disruptions.

Zero Trust Without the Buzzwords: What It Actually Looks Like in Practice

Zero Trust is often discussed as a complex cybersecurity strategy, but at its core, it is about verifying access, limiting unnecessary permissions, and reducing risk. This blog explains what Zero Trust actually looks like in practice for small businesses and government contractors — without the buzzwords, hype, or confusion.

Access Creep Is a Business Risk: How Over-Permissioned Users Create Exposure

Access creep happens when users accumulate permissions over time and keep access they no longer need. For small businesses and government contractors, this creates unnecessary cybersecurity, compliance, and operational risk. This blog explains how over-permissioned users increase exposure and what organizations can do to strengthen access controls, reduce privilege misuse, and improve audit readiness.

Why Identity-Based Attacks Dominate Cybersecurity in 2026

Identity has become the new cybersecurity perimeter. In 2026, attackers are increasingly using stolen credentials, MFA fatigue tactics, and identity misuse to gain access to business systems. This blog explains why identity-based attacks are dominating the threat landscape and what small businesses and government contractors can do to strengthen access controls, improve MFA, and reduce exposure.

The Audit Readiness Problem Government Contractors Can’t Afford to Ignore

Many government contractors are not failing audits because they lack tools. They are failing because documentation is incomplete, evidence is disorganized, and readiness starts too late. This blog explains the most common gaps and how to fix them before an audit begins.

Free
Small Business Cybersecurity Checklist

cybersecurity checklist graphic