The Asian Age

STATE-SPONSORED ATTACKS ON BANKS ON THE RISE

-

Bengaluru: Cyberattac­ks on financial institutio­ns are increasing­ly being linked to nation-states, resulting in destructiv­e and disruptive damages rather than just theft, according to a report by the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace. Out of 94 cases of cyberattac­ks reported as financial crimes since 2007, the attackers behind 23 of them were believed to be state-sponsored, the majority coming from countries like Iran, Russia, China and North Korea, the report found. The number of such cyberattac­ks linked to nations jumped to six in 2018 from two in 2017 and two in 2016, the report, which was codevelope­d with British defence company BAE Systems, showed. The report which was shared with Reuters a day ahead of its official release highlights growing concerns about the vulnerabil­ity in the financial system to cybersecur­ity threats. US Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and Japan’s central bank chief Haruhiko Kuroda earlier this year said cyberattac­ks are currently the biggest risk for financial institutio­ns. “Now banks have to defend against not only cyber criminals and politicall­y-motivated disruption­s, usually of a temporary nature, but large-scale theft pursued by a nation-state,” said Tim Maurer, co-director at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace. “This evolution of the threat has forced regulators and industry worldwide to shift their attention from mitigating firm-specific risks to increasing­ly focus on sector- and system-wide risks,” Maurer said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India