Information
Transfer among Internet Firms: The Case of Hacker Attacks
Michael
Ettredge and Vernon J. Richardson |
| ABSTRACT:
This study focuses on the stock market reaction to denial of service attacks
against certain well-known Internet firms in February 2000. Investors
appear to have used several heuristics in deciding which firms were ‘similar’
to those attacked, and thus predicted that they were also likely to be
attacked. The primary heuristic employed appears to have been similarity
in reliance on the Internet to conduct operating activities (i.e., the
set of Internet firms). We find negative mean abnormal returns among Internet
firms not actually attacked (i.e., information transfer). This occurred
both within Internet industries in which some firms were attacked, and
within Internet industries with no attacks. A secondary heuristic appears
to have been that Internet firms similar in size to those attacked (i.e.,
relatively large) were more likely to be attacked. In contrast to all
other Internet industries, providers of Internet security products and
services experienced positive mean abnormal returns. |