2023 Annual Identity Exposure Report

2023 Annual Identity Exposure Report Image

With nearly half of our data coming from botnets last year, our annual report of recaptured darknet data features key trends about malware and identity exposure.

2022 Ransomware Defense Report

2022 Ransomware Defense Report Preview

Our annual report shows a surprising increase in organizations that experienced multiple ransomware attacks, the costly impacts of ineffective countermeasures, and future plans to improve defenses.

2022 Fortune 1000 Identity Exposure Report

Image of SpyCloud's Fortune 1000 Identity Exposure Report

Our annual analysis of data tied to Fortune 1000 companies includes insights on credential exposure, password reuse rates, and the impact of malware-infected employees and consumers.

2022 Report: Identity Exposure of London’s FTSE 100

Graphic of SpyCloud's 2022 FTSE Identity Exposure Report

Our annual analysis of exposed credentials and PII tied to London’s FTSE 100 employees uncovered insights about password reuse and malware-infected devices that put these organisations and the companies that rely on them at risk.

2022 Annual Identity Exposure Report

2022 SpyCloud Identity Exposure Report

Our annual reports analyzes the 15.5 billion assets we recaptured from the criminal underground last year, and how enterprises can use this information to protect themselves from ATO, malware, and ransomware, and protect their consumers from online fraud.

2021 Ransomware Defense Report

Ransomware Defense Report Preview

Our report breaks down the frequency of ransomware attacks on organizations of all sizes, insights on ransomware preparedness measures, and details on the criminal economy that’s fueling ransomware right now.

2021 Annual Credential Exposure Report

Annual Credential Exposure Report

Over the last 12 months, SpyCloud has recovered 1.5 billion credentials from 854 breach sources. Find out the trends our researchers have observed, including exposed .gov credentials and pandemic-themed keywords in users’ passwords.