– Positive emotions can increase risk-taking, making individuals more susceptible to phishing scams.
– Data overload diminishes decision-making capacity, increasing impulsive behavior when confronted with suspicious emails or online content.
– High personalization in spear-phishing campaigns results in significantly higher victim susceptibility-three times higher compared to low-personalization attacks.
The rise of sophisticated cyberattacks globally carries significant implications for India as it digitizes key sectors like banking, e-governance, and infrastructure. With the country advancing its “Digital India” initiative, increased reliance on digital interactions could create vulnerabilities similar to what was seen with the Colonial Pipeline ransomware incident.
A notable challenge lies in countering cyber threats that exploit human psychology-such as positive emotional triggers-in phishing strategies or information overload amidst India’s growing internet user base. Given these findings on vulnerability factors from international studies cited in this article (e.g., readiness potential or emotional risk biases), cybersecurity education for both individual users and organizations becomes essential.
India’s role as one of the largest consumer bases for tech services means that proactive measures such as robust personal data protection policies (like GDPR-equivalent frameworks) could mitigate risks posed by personalized spear-phishing attacks targeting citizens. Additionally, enhancing public-private collaboration on tackling data brokers would safeguard Indian users while collectively strengthening global resilience against cybercrimes.