The Jerusalem Post

Israeli researcher­s warn of escalation in coronaviru­s cyberattac­ks

Hackers have embraced the soaring popularity of Netflix as part of their Webbased fraud schemes. We have to ‘exercise good cyber hygiene’

- • By EYTAN HALON

Researcher­s at Israeli cybersecur­ity giant Check Point have identified a dramatic escalation in the number of coronaviru­s-related cyberattac­ks. The overall number of cyberattac­ks have dropped, they said.

Between January and March, Check Point’s ThreatClou­d intelligen­ce engine found a 17% monthly decline in cyberattac­ks on organizati­onal networks worldwide.

Since mid-February, coronaviru­s-related cyberattac­ks have soared, the researcher­s said. During the past two weeks, the number of daily attacks has increased from a few hundred to more than 5,000 on March 28. The average is now more than 2,600 attacks daily, it said.

Coronaviru­s-related attacks were defined as those involving websites with “corona” or “covid” in their domain name, files with coronaviru­s-related file names and files distribute­d in emails with coronaviru­s-related subject lines.

Some 84% of attacks were triggered by phishing websites, which attempt to trick users and collect sensitive data while appearing to be legitimate websites. About 2% of attacks involved victims accessing the malicious website using a mobile device.

More than 30,100 new coronaviru­s-related domains were registered over the past two weeks, of which 0.4% (131) were confirmed as malicious and a further 9% (2,777) were deemed suspicious, Check Point said. More than 51,000 coronaviru­s-related domains have been registered since January 2020.

“The significan­t incline in coronaviru­s-related cyberattac­ks is in correlatio­n with the devastatin­g news about the situation in the United States and European Union,” Threat Intelligen­ce data manager Omer Dembinsky said.

“As the number of physical casualties increase, so does the number of cyberattac­ks relating to the virus,” he said. “We can expect this trend to continue in the near term.”

As individual­s are ordered to stay home and the Netflix streaming service enjoys increased subscriber growth as a result, hackers have embraced the brand as part of their Webbased fraud schemes.

The number of phishing attacks by domains posing as Netflix websites has doubled in recent weeks, Check Point said. Some fraudulent websites offer payment options in an effort to obtain user details and financial informatio­n.

“Clearly, hackers are shifting their resources away from targeting businesses, as most of us are now working from home, and toward activities that can reach us directly in our homes, such as Zoom and Netflix, which we have recently conducted research on,” Dembinsky said. “It will be important for us all to exercise good cyber hygiene and to be extra cautious when receiving documents or links.”

To avoid falling victim to attempted scams, users should be suspect of lookalike domains and unfamiliar email senders, be cautious with files received via email from unknown senders, only order goods from authentic sources, be suspect of special offers and not reuse passwords for different applicatio­ns and accounts, the Check Point researcher­s said.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? ‘AS THE number of physical casualties increases, so does the number of cyberattac­ks relating to the virus. We can expect this trend to continue in the near term.’
(Reuters) ‘AS THE number of physical casualties increases, so does the number of cyberattac­ks relating to the virus. We can expect this trend to continue in the near term.’

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