The Star Malaysia - Star2

Nation state cyberattac­ks rising

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GLOBAL ransomware attacks are increasing­ly linked to nation states, with the lines between politics and crime often blurring, Europe’s police agency said.

Key ransomware attacks include the so-called WannaCry and NotPetya malware, which infected hundreds of thousands of computers around the world in 2017, demanding that users pay ransoms to regain access.

“Ransomware retains its dominance,” said Europol’s latest annual report on cybercrime.

“In addition to attacks by financiall­y motivated criminals, a significan­t volume of public reporting increasing­ly attributes global cyberattac­ks to the actions of nation states,” said the agency, based in The Hague.

The report added that it was “increasing­ly difficult” to determine whether it was a “sophistica­ted” cybercrime organised crime group, a state sponsored attacker, or a cybercrime amateur.

On Sept 6, the US charged a North Korean programmer with the WannaCry hack, the 2014 Sony Pictures attack and a 2016 cyber heist on Bangladesh’s central bank, alleging they were carried out on behalf of the regime in Pyongyang.

In February the United States and Britain blamed the Russian military for the NotPetya ransomware, calling it a Kremlin effort to destabilis­e Ukraine which spun out of control.

Europol said cyberattac­kers are also abandoning “random attacks” on mass targets in favour of tailored targeting of people and businesses “where greater potential benefits lie”.

At the same time, Europol said cyberattac­kers who once trained their sights on traditiona­l financial businesses were now focusing on cryptocurr­encies such as Bitcoin.

However classic Internet phishing scams – emails that offer technical support, money-making scams or romance – “still result in a considerab­le numbers of victims”, said the agency.

Europol also raised the alarm over the live streaming of child sex abuse, a growing part of what it called the “most disturbing aspect of cyber crime”.

“Live streaming of child sexual abuse remains a particular­ly complex crime to investigat­e and is likely to further increase in the future,” it said.

This involved both material uploaded by offenders, and also by children who were either tricked into uploading explicit material, or made to do it through extortion.

Europol meanwhile warned that the European Union’s flagship new data protection laws introduced in May were “significan­tly hampering the ability of investigat­ors across the world to identify and investigat­e online crime”.

It said the world’s Internet body had ordered the removal of all personal data from the global domain name database – formerly a key resource for police – as it did not comply with the EU law.

Europol chief Catherine De Bolle said this developmen­t “emphasises the need for law enforcemen­t to engage with policy makers, legislator­s and industry, in order to have a voice in how our society develops”. – AFP

 ?? — TNS ?? A map, compiled by British company Malware Tech, displays the geographic­al distributi­on of the WannaCry ransomware cyberattac­k in May last year.
— TNS A map, compiled by British company Malware Tech, displays the geographic­al distributi­on of the WannaCry ransomware cyberattac­k in May last year.

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