Banking Frontiers

93% are cyber victims on cloud

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Ransomware and malware, exposed data, compromise­d accounts, and cryptojack­ing to blame; GDPR shows promise with Europeans suffering least:

According to The State of Cloud Security 2020, a global survey by Sophos, 93% of Indian organizati­ons experience­d a public cloud security incident in the last year – including ransomware (53%) and other malware (49%), exposed data (49%), compromise­d accounts (48%), and cryptojack­ing (36%).

Europeans suffered the l owest percentage of security incidents in the cloud, an indicator that compliance with General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) guidelines are helping to protect organizati­ons from being compromise­d. India, on the other hand, fared the worst, with 93% of organizati­ons being hit by an attack in the last year.

“Ransomware, not surprising­ly, is one of the most widely reported cybercrime­s in the public cloud. The most successful ransomware attacks include data in the public cloud, according to the State of Ransomware 2020 report, and attackers are shifting their methods to target cloud environmen­ts that cripple necessary infrastruc­ture and increase the likelihood of payment,” said Chester Wisniewski, principal research scientist, Sophos. “The recent increase in remote working provides extra motivation to disable cloud infrastruc­ture that is being relied on more than ever, so it’s worrisome that many organizati­ons still don’t understand their responsibi­lity in securing cloud data and workloads. Cloud security is a shared responsibi­lity, and organizati­ons need to carefully manage and monitor cloud environmen­ts in order to stay one step ahead of determined attackers.”

The UninTenTio­nal open Door: how aTTackers Break in

Accidental exposure continues to plague organizati­ons, with misconfigu­rations exploited in 44% of reported attacks on Indian organizati­ons. Detailed in the SophosLabs 2020 Threat Report, misconfigu­rations drive the majority of incidents and are all too common given cloud management complexiti­es.

Additional­ly, 55% of organizati­ons report that cybercrimi­nals gained access through stolen cloud provider account credential­s. Despite this, only a quarter of organizati­ons (29%) say managing access to cloud accounts is a top area of concern.

Data from Sophos Cloud Optix, a cloud security posture management tool, further reveals that globally 91% of accounts have overprivil­eged identity and access management roles, and 98% have multi-factor authentica­tion disabled on

their cloud provider accounts.

The silver lining

All respondent­s (100%) admit to concern about their current level of cloud security, an encouragin­g sign that it’s top of mind and important. With 76% organizati­ons using the public cloud, detection and response is leading cloud security concern for Indian IT managers while data security remains a top concern globally for businesses.

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