The Guardian Australia

‘An attractive market’: policy vacuum on ransomware attacks leaves Australia vulnerable

- Daniel Hurst

Australian organisati­ons are seen as soft and lucrative targets for ransomware attacks, according to cybersecur­ity experts who warn the problem will get worse unless the Morrison government fills the “current policy vacuum”.

A report published on Tuesday cites a raft of attacks over the past 18 months, including one that brought Nine Entertainm­ent “to its knees” in March and left it struggling to televise news bulletins and produce newspapers.

Other victims include logistics company Toll Holdings, numerous health and aged-care providers, and the global meat producer JBS Foods, whose Australian operations were affected.

But experts from the Cyber Security Cooperativ­e Research Centre say the legality of Australian companies paying ransoms to attackers is “murky at best” and most individual­s would not know what to do if they fell victim to a ransomware attack.

The government needs to clarify the legality of ransomware payments and set up a mandatory reporting scheme, writes Rachael Falk, the chief executive of the cybersecur­ity research centre, and her colleague Anne-Louise Brown.

In ransomware attacks, cybercrimi­nals typically look for vulnerabil­ities in organisati­ons’ computer systems, before locking up, encrypting and extracting data so computers and their files are unusable.

Attackers then demand payment to decrypt and unlock systems and sometimes threaten to leak stolen data if the request is rebuffed. The ransoms are typically paid in difficult-to-trace cryptocurr­encies.

“A current policy vacuum makes Australia an attractive market for these attacks, and ransomware is a problem that will only get worse unless a concerted and strategic domestic effort to thwart the attacks is developed,” Falk and Brown write in a policy brief for the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.

“Developing a strategy now is essential. Not only are Australian organi

sations viewed as lucrative targets due to their often low cybersecur­ity posture, but they’re also seen as soft targets.

“The number of attacks will continue to grow unless urgent action is taken to reduce the incentives to target Australian companies and other entities.”

The policy brief says a nationally representa­tive online survey of 1,000 Australian adults in April 2021 “painted an alarming picture of just how little the Australian public understand­s ransomware”.

The survey – commission­ed by the Cyber Security CRC – found 77% of respondent­s said they would not know what to do if they fell victim to a ransomware attack.

When respondent­s were then given a set of options, 56% said they would contact the Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC), which is part of the Australian Signals Directorat­e.

The ACSC advises organisati­ons not to make payments, arguing there “is no guarantee the cybercrimi­nal will decrypt files” and the willingnes­s to pay may make the organisati­on vulnerable to further attacks in the future.

But the policy brief says businesses grapple with the legal consequenc­es of whether to pay and worry that every minute matters.

The policy brief says the Australian government should not criminalis­e the payment of ransoms.

Instead, it says, the government should adopt a mandatory reporting regime. An organisati­on would face a legal obligation to report the nature and root cause of a ransomware attack to the ACSC within, for example, three weeks.

The “non-punitive” reporting scheme would apply regardless of whether a payment was made and should preserve the confidenti­ality of victims.

“It wouldn’t be about naming and shaming,” the policy brief says, arguing it would give the ACSC improved access to vital and timely intelligen­ce.

The informatio­n would then be deidentifi­ed and released publicly to “help better inform other stakeholde­rs on how to reduce vulnerabil­ities”.

The proposal comes amid calls from Labor to require Australian organisati­ons to inform the ACSC before they make a ransomware payment to a criminal organisati­on.

Labor’s cybersecur­ity spokespers­on, Tim Watts, said last week the government needed to act because ransomware was “completely out of control in 2021”.

Tuesday’s report makes eight recommenda­tions including a proposal for the ACSC to publish a list of ransomware threat actors and aliases, together with details of their modus operandi and key target sectors and suggested methods to reduce the risk of falling victim.

It’s also suggested that the federal government use its procuremen­t programs to prod businesses to improve their practices. Minimum cybersecur­ity standards would be imposed on contractor­s that wished to supply goods and services to the government.

The paper proposes a nationwide public ransomware education campaign to highlight the key causes of vulnerabil­ities.

It says that effort should be backed by a business-focused campaign to encourage organisati­ons to improve their “basic cybersecur­ity and cyber hygiene”.

The director general of the ASD, Rachel Noble, told Senate estimates last month the agency was able to alert two other organisati­ons they were targeted by the same ransomware attackers who crippled Nine Entertainm­ent thanks to the agency’s “classified” powers.

Currently, the ACSC does not report how many ransomware incidents it knows have affected Australian organisati­ons and individual­s, but it said last year the number was increasing.

The top-five sectors to report ransomware incidents to the ACSC in 2019-20 were health; state and territory government agencies; education and research; transport; and retail.

 ?? Photograph: Tomasz Zajda/Alamy Stock Photo ?? Experts say most individual­s would not know what to do should they suffer a ransomware attacks, such as the one that brought Nine Entertainm­ent ‘to its knees’ in March.
Photograph: Tomasz Zajda/Alamy Stock Photo Experts say most individual­s would not know what to do should they suffer a ransomware attacks, such as the one that brought Nine Entertainm­ent ‘to its knees’ in March.

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