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2026 年資安戰略:超越希望

作為資安領導者,我們花了數年時間為各種假設做準備。2025 年結束了這種奢侈。談論「如果」的時代已經過去,我們現在正處於「何時」的時代。

「希望不是一種戰略。它只是一種拖延戰術,只會讓最終的復原代價翻倍。」

1. 威脅的平民化

AI 為攻擊者抹平了技術門檻。曾經需要國家級資源才能進行的高層級偵察與執行,現在透過自動化與廉價的腳本即可達成。

2. 影子 AI 與治理

效率正在推動員工在防火牆外使用 AI 工具。治理職能必須從「說不」轉向為「建立護欄」,在不犧牲數據完整性的前提下允許速度。

混合韌性

攻擊現在可以在雲端、SaaS 和地端基礎設施之間無縫轉移。

人員因素

復原是一個流程,而非產品。在現實逼迫你做決定之前,先透過模擬進行決策演練。

3. 從樂觀轉向準備就緒

2026 年成功的組織將是那些「預設會發生中斷」的組織。他們優先考慮:

  • 獨立且具備保險庫機制的備份。
  • 文件化的復原優先順序。
  • 將「不可篡改性」(Immutability)作為標準,而非選項。

關於 Keepit

Keepit 立足於為雲端時代提供新世代的 SaaS 資料保護。其核心理念是透過獨立於應用程式供應商的雲端儲存,為企業關鍵應用加上一道安全鎖,不僅強化網路韌性,更實現前瞻性的資料保護策略。其獨特、分隔且不可變的資料儲存設計,不涉及任何次級處理器,確保符合各地法規,有效抵禦勒索軟體等威脅,並保證關鍵資料隨時可存取、業務不中斷,以及快速高效的災難復原能力。總部位於丹麥哥本哈根的 Keepit,其辦公室與資料中心遍及全球,已贏得超過 15,000 家企業的深度信賴,客戶普遍讚譽其平台的直覺易用性,以及輕鬆、可靠的雲端資料備份與復原體驗。

關於Version 2

Version 2 Digital 是立足亞洲的增值代理商及IT開發者。公司在網絡安全、雲端、數據保護、終端設備、基礎設施、系統監控、存儲、網絡管理、商業生產力和通信產品等各個領域代理發展各種 IT 產品。透過公司龐大的網絡、通路、銷售點、分銷商及合作夥伴,Version 2 提供廣被市場讚賞的產品及服務。Version 2 的銷售網絡包括台灣、香港、澳門、中國大陸、新加坡、馬來西亞等各亞太地區,客戶來自各行各業,包括全球 1000 大跨國企業、上市公司、公用事業、醫療、金融、教育機構、政府部門、無數成功的中小企及來自亞洲各城市的消費市場客戶。

ESET finds that SMBs currently leverage cyber insurance to arm against attacks, report incidents and improve resilience

SAN DIEGO & TORONTO — April 16, 2026 — ESET, a global leader in cybersecurity, today released its 2026 SMB Cyber Readiness Index – North America edition. This new report surveyed hundreds of small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) from across the United States and Canada to uncover new insights into their cyber resilience, incidents and reporting, perceived threats, and investments – while analyzing the current appetite for managed services, cyber insurance and AI-powered applications.

In this new report, 87% of U.S. and 83% of Canadian SMBs said that they feel slightly to very confident that their business is cyber resilient. Across both countries, cyber resilience confidence rose to 91% and 88%, respectively, for businesses that had more than one cyber incident in the last year (over businesses that had zero or one incident during that timeframe). Across both regions, about half of respondents (47% in the U.S. and 52% in Canada) said that they don’t expect a change in cybersecurity budget this year.

“SMBs in the U.S. and Canada are entering a new phase of cybersecurity where attacks are becoming the new norm and an expected part of business operations,” said Tony Anscombe, Chief Security Evangelist at ESET. “We’ve seen significant shifts in how SMBs perceive today’s risks and how they prepare for them, relying more on cyber insurers to provide cybersecurity services and as a core part of their resilience strategy. While SMBs are worried about headline catching AI‑driven threats, most breaches are still a result of social engineering coupled with human error – including phishing, credential compromise and third party/supply chain risk.”

In order to manage cyber-attacks, SMBs are increasingly including cyber insurance in their resilience strategies to ensure compliance, financial stability and peace of mind when incidents occur. Today, 86% of U.S. SMBs carry cyber insurance, with over half deploying specific security controls (e.g., MFA, IAM, EDR/MDR) as part of their coverage conditions. Canadian SMBs only trail slightly with 78% carrying cyber insurance. In both countries, respondents who have had more than one incident are more likely to carry insurance.

On the AI front, Canadians are more cautious about the deployment of new AI applications than their U.S. counterparts. 69% of Canadian respondents said that they are integrating AI applications into their organization compared to 81% of U.S. respondents.

The 2026 Index surveyed 700 cybersecurity decision-makers across U.S. and Canadian organizations with 25 to 1,000 endpoints, uncovering new insights into SMB cyber readiness, incident response, cybersecurity tools and management, insurance and compliance, AI strategy, and more. Here are some additional highlights from the report released today:

“Perception vs. Reality”: Are SMBs worried about the right threats? 

  • SMBs across the U.S. (32%) and Canada (34%) say AI-powered malware is their top concern for the year ahead, a signal of how dominant AI has become in headlines and boardroom conversations.
  • But the actual causes of breaches paint a very different picture. In the U.S., the leading drivers of cyber incidents remain phishing (27%), lack of security monitoring (27%) and unpatched security vulnerabilities (25%). In Canada, attacks most often stem from phishing (21%), weak passwords (20%), and insufficient security monitoring (20%).
  • Meanwhile, one of the most consequential risks, supply chain compromise, barely registers among SMBs’ top concerns in the survey, ranking eighth (17%) among U.S. respondents and 10th (16%) for Canadians – despite the potential for widespread downstream impact.
  • Finally, 82% of U.S. and Canadian SMBs agree that cyber warfare and global conflict pose a real threat to their business, underscoring how interconnected today’s risks are.

Cyber insurance is influencing security behavior

  • Incident experience is a major driver of cyber risk insurance adoption: 95% of U.S. and 92% of Canadian SMBs that suffered multiple incidents carry insurance, compared to 77% of U.S. and 68% of Canadian businesses with no incidents.
  • In both markets, insurers are playing a more direct role in shaping security posture: 55% of insured U.S. SMBs and 41% of insured Canadian SMBs are required to implement specific controls, often involving continuous monitoring or MDR‑style services, as a condition of coverage.
  • Of SMBs surveyed, 16% U.S. and 19% of Canadian respondents say that they outsource some or all of their cybersecurity. Of the U.S. companies that outsource, 35% of SMBs now outsource security to a cyber insurer offering MDR, 21% use an MDR vendor, 17% rely on an MSP/MSSP with MDR, and 27% still use a traditional MSP.
  • Of the Canadian companies who outsource, 27% of SMBs now outsource security to a cyber insurer offering MDR, 8% use an MDR vendor, 27% rely on an MSP/MSSP with MDR, and 38% still use a traditional MSP.

Anscombe noted, “In cybersecurity, diversity is necessary to achieve a resilient ecosystem. While it’s heartening to see SMBs adopt cyber risk insurance, there needs to be greater awareness of potential monoculture issues as North American cyber insurers that provide managed services typically offer a limited choice of services and products. In fact, 72% and 66% of US and Canadian businesses respectively are concerned with the implications of single vendor ecosystems (i.e., security monocultures).”

Confidence rising meets increasing attacks

  • Even as confidence rises, cyberattacks remain widespread across the U.S. and Canada, reinforcing the sense that cybersecurity incidents are now an inevitable part of doing business.
  • In the U.S., 54% of SMBs experienced an incident in the past 12 months, including 22% who faced multiple breaches. Canada shows a similar trend, with 46% reporting at least one incident and 12% experiencing more than one. These numbers highlight how frequently SMBs are being targeted and successfully compromised, despite increased awareness and stronger budgets.
  • This growing prevalence is shaping how SMBs think about risk, pushing many to build processes that assume disruption rather than hope to avoid it altogether. In fact, organizations with multiple incidents show the highest confidence levels. In the U.S., 52% of those with repeat incidents (and 42% of Canadians) identify as “very confident,” compared to firms with only one or no incidents.
  • These repeatedly targeted organizations also report the strongest budgets, with 45% of U.S. SMBs in this category describing their cybersecurity funding as “more than sufficient” and expecting additional investment increases. Canadian firms were less enthusiastic with their budget – with 25% identifying their budgets as “more than sufficient.”
  • Finally, cybersecurity confidence does not always correlate with company size in the United States. Larger U.S. SMBs (500–1,000 endpoints) are less likely to deploy advanced, proactive measures such as threat detection and response (24%) than smaller SMBs (34%), indicating that operational complexity may be outpacing modernization efforts even as confidence rises.

SMBs are still investing in awareness & training

  • Across both the U.S. and Canada, cyber awareness training emerges as the top investment priority for the year ahead, reinforcing the reality that human error remains the most exploited weakness in today’s attacks.
  • Over 90% of SMBs in both countries say training is “critical” or “very important,” with 42% of U.S. SMBs and 43% of Canadian SMBs planning to increase these investments in the next 12 months—making it the leading budget category in both markets.
  • Nearly half of SMBs now go beyond basic training: 44% of U.S. organizations and 47% in Canada use structured programs that include phishing simulations, a shift likely driven by rising concern over AI‑driven phishing techniques and deepfake‑enabled impersonation threats.
  • This emphasis on strengthening the human layer aligns closely with incident data, as phishing remains a top cause of breaches (27% in the U.S., 21% in Canada), underscoring why SMBs continue to invest heavily in awareness, behavior change, and simulation‑based resilience.

“Confidence is growing, but the reality is that most breaches still come from preventable issues like phishing, weak passwords, and monitoring gaps,” said Anscombe. “If cyberattacks are the new normal, then getting the fundamentals right matters more than ever.”

ESET’s 2026 SMB Cyber Readiness Index surveyed 700 cybersecurity decision‑makers across the United States and Canada in industries such as manufacturing, construction, healthcare, retail, telecommunications, transportation, and more. This included 500 respondents from the United States and 200 from Canada with 25 to 1,000 endpoints. Notably, 67% of U.S. respondents and 51% of Canadian respondents were their company’s primary decision makers for cybersecurity.

For media who would like to see the SMB data or to set up an interview, please reach out to pr@eset.com.

 

About ESET
For 30 years, ESET® has been developing industry-leading IT security software and services for businesses and consumers worldwide. With solutions ranging from endpoint security to encryption and two-factor authentication, ESET’s high-performing, easy-to-use products give individuals and businesses the peace of mind to enjoy the full potential of their technology. ESET unobtrusively protects and monitors 24/7, updating defenses in real time to keep users safe and businesses running without interruption. Evolving threats require an evolving IT security company. Backed by R&D facilities worldwide, ESET became the first IT security company to earn 100 Virus Bulletin VB100 awards, identifying every single “in-the-wild” malware without interruption since 2003.

About Version 2 Digital

Version 2 Digital is one of the most dynamic IT companies in Asia. The company distributes a wide range of IT products across various areas including cyber security, cloud, data protection, end points, infrastructures, system monitoring, storage, networking, business productivity and communication products.

Through an extensive network of channels, point of sales, resellers, and partnership companies, Version 2 offers quality products and services which are highly acclaimed in the market. Its customers cover a wide spectrum which include Global 1000 enterprises, regional listed companies, different vertical industries, public utilities, Government, a vast number of successful SMEs, and consumers in various Asian cities.

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