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Cyber Attacks Now Viewed as Existential Threat by Majority of Firms

Nearly two-thirds of organizations now believe a major cyber attack could jeopardize their very survival, marking a shift from fringe concern to mainstream consensus. Data from the 2026 Health Check survey highlights that digital incursions have officially surpassed hardware failure as the primary driver of operational downtime.

Bio & NewsJune 24, 2026460 reads0

For the fourth consecutive year, cyber threats remain the leading cause of data loss and system failure. According to the report from Databarracks, which surveyed 500 IT decision-makers, 30% of companies identified cyber incidents as their primary source of downtime, significantly outpacing the 19% attributed to hardware issues. Among large enterprises, 43% confirmed they have suffered actual data loss due to these attacks.

The landscape is further complicated by the rapid rise of AI-driven threats, which have doubled in frequency over the past year and now impact 25% of organizations. James Watts, Managing Director at Databarracks, noted that this shift toward existential dread is grounded in real-world experience rather than alarmist speculation. Despite these pressures, a sense of cautious optimism persists: 76% of respondents claim their resilience has improved since 2025.

Recovery strategies are also evolving. Only 18% of firms hit by ransomware chose to pay the attackers, while 59% successfully restored their operations using existing backups. As organizations prioritize the integration of IT and business resilience, the focus is shifting toward immutable and air-gapped backup solutions. Watts emphasizes that while confidence is growing, true security depends on rigorous testing and the proven ability to recover when defenses inevitably fail.

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