BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Surge in cybercrime, laws
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Sat, 4 Apr 2026 08:35:18 -0500
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'Growing 3x faster than police staffing': Surge in cybercrime and new laws on
ransomware payment could put UK businesses (and their directors)  in a
"compliance trap."

Date:
Sat, 04 Apr 2026 09:05:00 +0000

Description:
Cybercrime in the UK is rising faster than policing capacity, while stricter
laws increase compliance risks for businesses facing ransomware attacks.

FULL STORY
Cybercrime cases climbed from 774 thousand to over 1.4 million
Police staffing for cybercrime rose by only 31% during the same period
Each officer now handles significantly more cases than four years ago

Cybercrime in the United Kingdom is expanding at a rate that exceeds the
growth of dedicated policing resources, and new figures from Forbes 
Solicitors claim fraud and computer misuse offenses have increased sharply in
recent years, while staffing levels in cyber and economic crime units rose at
a slower pace. 

Reported incidents climbed from 774,537 cases in 2020 to 1,458,704 in the
latest figures, representing an increase of 88% - but over the same period,
the number of personnel handling such offenses rose by 31%. This means that
reported incidents are rising 3x faster than policing, creating a widening
imbalance between workload and available resources. As a result, each staff
member is now responsible for substantially more cases than in previous 
years.  Offense volumes surge sharply within a short time frame --
At the same time, regulatory changes are advancing
through Parliament with the aim of strengthening national cyber resilience. 

The Cyber Security and Resilience Bill is expected to become law this year,
and Government is also looking at new legislation for banning and preventing
ransomware payments, said Craig MacKenzie, Head of High Profile and Private
Crime at Forbes Solicitors. 

The proposed legislation is expected to introduce stricter requirements for
organizations, alongside expanded enforcement powers and higher financial
penalties for non-compliance. 

Existing penalty limits could be replaced by fines linked to a percentage of
global turnover, which would increase potential liabilities for large
organizations.

New laws are a positive move but would likely bring compliance requirements
that will be tougher to meet without sufficient policing, MacKenzie added. 

Alongside broader reforms, the government is considering measures that would
restrict or prohibit ransomware payments, an approach intended to reduce
incentives for attackers. 

However, ransomware incidents have already demonstrated their ability to
disrupt operations for extended periods, often forcing companies into
difficult decisions under pressure.

Proposed rules could introduce civil or criminal penalties for organizations
and directors who choose to pay, even when operational continuity is at 
stake. 

This will likely create a situation where compliance obligations may conflict
with immediate operational realities. 

The combination of increasing cybercrime and stricter regulation introduces a
layered burden for organizations, particularly those lacking extensive
internal security capabilities. 

Businesses may be required to strengthen defenses, monitor systems more
closely, and respond to incidents under tighter legal constraints with 
limited external resources. 

Its hard to justify asking businesses and their staff to take on bigger
responsibilities  and greater liability  when police staffing isnt growing
anywhere near as fast as the number of fraud and computer misuse offenses,
said MacKenzie. 

However, organizations are advised to ensure strong cybersecurity by 
deploying up-to-date antivirus solutions and properly configured firewall
systems to reduce exposure to evolving threats.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/growing-3x-faster-than-police-staffing-
surge-in-cybercrime-and-new-laws-on-ransomware-payment-could-put-uk-businesses
-and-their-directors-in-a-compliance-trap

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