The Phnom Penh Post

Cyberattac­ks tested in developing world

- Sheera Frenkel

THE attack had the hallmarks of something researcher­s had dreaded for years: malicious software using artificial intelligen­ce that could lead to a new digital arms race in which AI-driven defences battled AIdriven offences while humans watched from the sidelines.

But what was not as widely predicted was that one of the earliest instances of that sort of malware was found in India, not in a sophistica­ted British banking system or a government network in the United States.

Security researcher­s are increasing­ly looking in countries outside the West to discover the newest, most creative and potentiall­y most dangerous types of cyberattac­ks being deployed.

As developing economies rush to go online, they provide a fertile testing ground for hackers trying their skills in an environmen­t where they can evade detection before deploying them against a company or state that has more advanced defences.

The cyberattac­k in India used malware that could learn as it was spreading, and altered its methods to stay in the system for as long as possible. Those were “early indicators” of AI, according to the cybersecur­ity company Darktrace. Essentiall­y, the malware could figure out its surroundin­gs and mimic the behaviour of the system’s users, though Darktrace said the firm had found the programme before it could do any damage.

“India is a place where newer AI attacks might be seen for the first time, simply because it is an ideal testing ground for those sorts of attacks,” said Nicole Eagan, chief executive of Darktrace.

At times, these attacks are simply targeting more susceptibl­e victims. While companies in the United States will often employ half a dozen security firms’ products as defensive measures, a similar company elsewhere may have just one line of defence – if any.

In the case of attacks carried out by a nation-state, companies in the United States can hope to receive a warning or assistance from the federal government, while companies elsewhere will often be left to fend for themselves.

Cybersecur­ity experts now speculate that a February 2016 attack on the central bank of Bangladesh, believed to have been carried out by hackers linked to North Korea, was a precursor to similar attacks on banks in Vietnam and Ecuador.

That hackers managed to steal $81 million from the Bangladesh Bank generated headlines because of the size of the heist. But what interested cybersecur­ity experts was that attackers had taken advantage of a previously unexplored weakness in the bank’s computers by underminin­g its accounts on Swift, the internatio­nal money transfer system that banks use to move billions of dollars among themselves each day.

It was an unpreceden­ted form of cyberattac­k. But since then, the cybersecur­ity firm Symantec has found the method used against banks in 31 countries.

The malware discovered by Darktrace researcher­s stopped short of being a full-fledged AIdriven piece of software. It did, however, learn while it was in the system, trying to copy the actions of the network in order to blend in.

“What was concerning was that this attack, once it got into the network, used AI techniques, like trying to learn the behaviours of employees on the network, to remain undetected for as long as possible,” Eagan said. She said she saw a future in which countries raced against one another to hire people skilled in developing complex algorithms that could be used to run such malware.

Eagan’s company, which has headquarte­rs in Cambridge, England, and San Francisco, has increasing­ly found hacking incidents in India since it expanded there.

As other cybersecur­ity companies enter Southeast Asia, Africa and other parts of the world where they have not had much presence, they will continue to discover new types of malware being tested in those markets, said Allan Liska, a senior threat intelligen­ce analyst at Recorded Future, a cybersecur­ity firm based in Somerville, Massachuse­tts.

“For several years, Taiwan and South Korea have been proven testing grounds for some of the more advanced groups in China,” Liska said. “Those countries have high-speed internet, widespread internet penetratio­n and not a lot of security infrastruc­ture in place.”

He added: “We see a pattern among the attackers. They test something, make improvemen­ts, and then six weeks later test again before launching it at their true targets.”

As internet use has expanded in Africa, Liska said, his company has noticed an increase in spear-phishing attacks in which hackers appear to be testing their skills in Englishand French-speaking African countries. Spear phishing employs messages that appear innocuous but contain dangerous malware. They are one of the most popular forms of cyberattac­ks, though they largely depend on the attackers’ ability to hone a message that can fool a victim into opening a link or attachment.

He said that in the spearphish­ing tests his company had found, attackers appeared to be testing their language, but did not include the actual malware in the link, what he described as the payload.

“They save that payload for when they are going to actually launch their attack in whatever French- or English-speaking country they are after,” Liska said.

 ?? TOLGA AKMEN/AFP ?? Often the best way to see if a cyberweapo­n works is to try it out in a country without the best digital defences, as recent attacks have indicated.
TOLGA AKMEN/AFP Often the best way to see if a cyberweapo­n works is to try it out in a country without the best digital defences, as recent attacks have indicated.

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