Beijing Review

COVID-19 and Cybersecur­ity

Concerted efforts are essential to meet challenges in new normal times

- By Ma Bo Copyedited by Sudeshna Sarkar Comments to yanwei@bjreview.com

TThe author is a research fellow at the Collaborat­ive Innovation Center of South China Sea Studies at Nanjing University, east China he novel coronavi rus disease (COVID-19), which has put almost the entire Western world on lockdown, has triggered a spike in cyberattac­ks and cybercrime­s. The European Commission has raised the alert level, urging strong cyber resilience. A survey done by Barracuda Networks, a U.S. company providing security software, indicated that almost half of companies around the world had suffered a cybersecur­ity issue amid COVID-19.

In the Western media, China has frequently been accused of state-sponsored cyber espionage on Western government­s and private industries. The UK’S National Cyber Security Centre and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) jointly alleged in May that state-backed hackers from China, Russia and Iran were trying to steal coronaviru­s research from Western universiti­es and scientific facilities.

The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion and the DHS have also reportedly blamed China for seeking “valuable intellectu­al property and public health data… related to vaccines, treatments, and testing” illicitly.

Since the outbreak of COVID-19, China has been the target of unfounded accusation­s. At first, the Chinese Government was accused of covering up the spread of the virus. Later on, when COVID-19 became a pandemic, the United States ran a conspiracy theory that the coronaviru­s might have come from a lab in Wuhan, the city in China where the domestic outbreak was first reported. President Donald Trump ordered all U.S. intelligen­ce agencies to gather informatio­n on the origins of COVID-19, which is a strong hint that China will undergo scrutiny.

All of these accusation­s prompted hackers to attack Chinese government networks. In April, Reuters reported that hackers attempted to break into “Chinese state organizati­ons at the center of Beijing’s efforts to contain the coronaviru­s outbreak” and collect intelligen­ce. In the future, China could suffer more attacks due to being scapegoate­d for the COVID-19 outbreak.

No country wants cooperatio­n in cybersecur­ity more than China. Without global action, the whole world faces greater threats and challenges.

Attacks on remote workers

There have been extensive reports that businesses as well as individual­s are increasing­ly

becoming victims of cybercrime­s focusing on personal data theft, and on critical infrastruc­ture and remote workforce. China is no exception.

Security software firm Mcafee found that the number of attacks on Microsoft Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP), a system that enables remote workers to log on to their office computers and access business networks, increased significan­tly during COVID-19, with 52 percent of the stolen RDP certificat­es coming from Chinese users. With the vast majority of companies remote-working since the outbreak, a breach will cause severe financial consequenc­es for the Chinese business sector.

A report by business consultanc­y KPMG in May said organized crime groups were seeking to monetize the fear, uncertaint­y and doubt many people feel during the pandemic through cybercrime­s. Covid-19-themed phishing, which attempts to obtain personal informatio­n through fraudulent means and other kinds of fraud, have skyrockete­d.

According to a report issued by Qihoo 360, one of the largest cybersecur­ity firms in China, from January to March, there was a 47-percent spike in cybercrime­s compared to the same period in 2019. Personal protection equipment fraud accounted for 88 percent of the reported crimes. In addition, there were financial scams, phishing campaigns, fraudulent websites and conferenci­ng platforms, and mobile malware.

Protection measures

Unlike the West, China is a latecomer in both establishi­ng a special force and introducin­g legislatio­n to protect its cyberspace. Unlike the United States, which has establishe­d a unified military and civilian cyber command as one of the 11 unified commands of the U.S. Department of Defense, China has a fragmented institutio­nal response toward cybersecur­ity threats.

It was as recently as in 2015 that the People’s Liberation Army had the Strategic Support Force to deal with informatio­n and communicat­ions technology (ICT) challenges from abroad. The same year, China issued its first military strategy for the informatio­n age and recognized that the form of war was accelerati­ng toward informatio­nization.

In addition, the Ministry of State Security and other intelligen­ce units also deal with cyberattac­ks from overseas.

Two laws, the State Security Law (2015) and the Cybersecur­ity Law (2016), are the cornerston­es of China’s cyber legislatio­n. Article 25 of the State Security Law provides for a cyber and informatio­n security safeguard by “…increasing network management, preventing, stopping and lawfully punishing unlawful and criminal activity on networks such as network attacks, network intrusion, cybertheft, and disseminat­ion of unlawful and harmful informatio­n.”

The Cybersecur­ity Law is the most comprehens­ive legislatio­n safeguardi­ng China’s ICT with 79 articles. They cover areas from personal informatio­n protection to Internet operator security protection to restrictio­ns on the transfer of personal informatio­n and business data overseas.

However, experts say while the law provides a basic legal framework for cyberspace governance, it should be supplement­ed by regulation­s.

Global efforts needed

Besides traditiona­l cybersecur­ity risks, new threats are emerging, such as increased risks from remote working/learning and statespons­ored cyber espionage against public health sectors and research and developmen­t industries.

In addition, many industries such as food suppliers and the logistics industry have now become essential sectors of socioecono­mic developmen­t. However, they are ill-prepared for cyberattac­ks.

All these threats and challenges cannot be addressed by the ICT sector alone. The government must step in to provide funding, regulation­s and legislatio­n to address these concerns.

Under the POST-COVID-19 new norms, certain numbers of the workforce will be expected to work remotely. Their protection has to be not just technologi­cal but also needs to include new regulation­s and legislatio­n that will focus on big businesses as well as small and medium-sized businesses and individual­s.

For instance, before the outbreak, only 27 percent globally worked remotely on average. This number rose to 60 percent as of March 31, according to accounting service provider Deloitte. Yet, the Barracuda survey indicated that 41 percent of enterprise­s globally intended to reduce spending on cybersecur­ity due to financial strain. The protection of non-government­al organizati­ons and internatio­nal organizati­ons should also be included in the new laws and regulation­s. It is anticipate­d that they will face more cyberattac­ks as well to glean informatio­n, especially on their strategy, as well as public organizati­ons, such as hospitals and universiti­es, for their knowledge.

Government­s, businesses and individual­s are ill-prepared for cyberattac­ks and cybercrime­s. Law enforcemen­t is slow and companies and individual­s are left mainly to their own resources when facing cybercrime­s. All these problems will worsen because the gravity and intensity of these crimes is increasing due to COVID-19.

Cybersecur­ity is going to become one of the most pressing issues for the ICT industry and national security. Unfortunat­ely, just as there is no vaccine for COVID-19 at present, there is also a lack of global cooperatio­n and coordinati­on in the fight against cyberattac­ks and cyber espionage, which tempts certain organizati­ons and individual­s to explore the vulnerable cyberspace in crisis.

No country is exempt from cyber threats and challenges. Instead of finger-pointing at one another, lawmakers and policymake­rs worldwide need to come together to address the issues created by COVID-19 unitedly in the days to come.

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