
A house doesn’t collapse in a day, its cracks were ignored for years.”
There's something nobody wants to say out loud, not governments, not big corporations, not even the so-called “cyber experts.”
Everyone is busy shouting “Cybercrime is getting worse!” or “Hackers are destroying businesses!” But honestly? After reading stories of JLR taking a month to recover, Asahi taking a week, and M&S taking six weeks…
I’m starting to think the real issue isn’t the hackers.
It’s the companies themselves.
Let me explain before you think I’ve lost it.
cybercrime is exposing how weak big companies really are
These firms love to present themselves as tech-savvy, innovation-driven giants… until one teenager with a laptop in his bedroom in Romania shuts down their entire operations for a month.
If a single cyber-attack can collapse your supply chain to the point where the government has to underwrite a £1.5bn loan just to prevent your suppliers from dying…
Brother, that’s not a cybercrime problem.
That’s a structural weakness problem.
It’s like saying “the rain destroyed my house” when your roof has been leaking for 12 years.
Why are we pretending ransom bans will fix anything?
Everyone loves the idea of banning ransom payments.
Sounds strong. Sounds firm. Sounds like “we mean business.”
But here’s the part that nobody wants to admit:
If companies weren’t so fragile, hackers wouldn’t have this much power in the first place.
Cybercrime is not beating these companies.
Their own outdated systems are.
Most of them are still running legacy software older than some of the interns.
Servers that were “temporary solutions”… from 2013.
Security budgets that get cut every year because “nothing happened last quarter.”
So of course when something finally does happen, the entire organisation melts like butter under the sun.
Imagine if airlines reacted this way…
Think about it:
If planes fell from the sky weekly because airlines didn’t maintain them, we wouldn’t blame gravity.
We’d blame the airline for not doing basic maintenance.
Yet when corporate networks collapse because they haven’t upgraded their systems since Obama’s first term, everyone screams “Cybercrime!”
Nah. Let’s call it what it is:
Corporate negligence disguised as victimhood.
What nobody tells you: these companies rely on chaos to survive
This is going to sound mad, but hear me out.
Some companies almost benefit from getting hacked.
They get government bailouts
They get sympathy
They get excuses for poor performance
They get “unexpected one-off disruption” cover in financial reports
It’s the perfect scapegoat.
It’s easier to say “Hackers damaged our systems” than to say “We didn’t invest in protecting our business.”
Cybercrime has become the corporate version of “the dog ate my homework.”
So what’s the real solution?
It’s not banning ransoms.
It’s not hiring more consultants.
It’s not creating another committee that will meet 12 times and produce a useless report.
The solution is simple:
Build systems that don’t fall apart like cardboard whenever someone sneezes near a server.
You can’t get hacked into chaos if your infrastructure isn’t a digital Jenga tower.
But companies avoid this because it’s expensive, boring, and doesn’t impress shareholders in the short term.
Until everything breaks.
Then they run to the government, head in hand.
So yeah… cybercrime is real. But the bigger threat is corporate laziness.
Cybercriminals are opportunists.
They look for cracks.
And these giant companies?
They’re basically walking around with broken doors, cracked windows, and a roof made of wet paper.
And instead of fixing the house, they’re arguing about whether to pay the thieves at the door.