Network Attackers Are More Likely To Log In Than Break In
The primary way that cyber attackers gain initial access to networks, accounting for 56% of cases, is by exploiting external remote services, which include edge devices such as firewalls and VPNs, by leveraging valid accounts.This is the headline finding from the 2025 Sophos Active Adversary Report, which details attacker behaviour and techniques from over 400 managed detection and response (MDR) and incident response (IR) cases in 2024.
The combination of external remote services and valid accounts aligns with the top root causes of attacks.For the second year in row, compromised credentials were the number one root cause of attacks (41% of cases). This was followed by exploited vulnerabilities (21,79%) and brute force attacks (21,07%).
When analysing MDR and IR investigations, the Sophos X-Ops team looked specifically at ransomware, data exfiltration, and data extortion cases to identify how fast attackers progressed through the stages of an attack within an organisation. In those three types of cases, the median time between the start of an attack and exfiltration was only 72.98 hours (3.04 days). Furthermore, there was only a median of 2,7 hours from exfiltration to attack detection.
Passive security is no longer enough. While prevention is essential, rapid response is critical. Organisations must actively monitor networks and act swiftly against observed telemetry. Coordinated attacks by motivated adversaries require a coordinated defence. For many organizations, that means combining business-specific knowledge with expert-led detection and response. Our report confirms that organisations with proactive monitoring detect attacks faster and experience better outcomes,” says John Shier, field CISO at Sophos.
Source Link : Network attackers are more likely to log in than break in