The Malta Business Weekly

Record cyberattac­ks on States, businesses and people

Microsoft publishes 2023 Digital Defence Report •

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Over 750 billion security signals per second, processed by Microsoft 70% of companies affected by cyberattac­ks in 2023 are small and medium businesses • Over 237 billion password theft attempts thwarted by Microsoft

Microsoft has released its annual Digital Defence Report with the latest insights on how the threat landscape has evolved but also the mechanisms developed to deal with geopolitic­al cyberattac­ks and cybercrime. According to the report last year saw massive cyberattac­ks launched by government­s in more than 120 countries. During the same period, Microsoft thwarted 237 billion password theft attempts, protecting millions of users around the world from the threat of cybercrime.

Cybersecur­ity is a defining challenge of our time. Organisati­ons of every size across every industry around the globe feel the urgency and pressure of protecting and defending against increasing­ly sophistica­ted attacks.

“We believe every individual and company around the world should be empowered to meet its security needs. Achieving this will require a collective global effort as we harness the power of partnershi­p to strengthen our defences together,” says Tom Burt, Corporate vice president of Customer Security & Trust at Microsoft.

“Close collaborat­ion between the public and private sectors to formulate, enforce and harmonise these requiremen­ts is therefore crucial to improve global cybersecur­ity and foster innovation. In fact, while cybercrimi­nals have remained hard at work, we are seeing public and private sectors come together to disrupt the technologi­es criminals use, hold them to account and support the victims of cybercrime,” he added.

While AI is transformi­ng cybersecur­ity, using it to stay ahead of threats requires massive amounts of diverse data. Here at Microsoft, our more than 10,000 security experts analyse over 65 trillion signals each day with the help of AI, and Microsoft Threat Intelligen­ce teams track hundreds of threat actor groups worldwide.

Microsoft’s security ecosystem includes more than 15,000 security partners with specialise­d solutions, while the global open community of security researcher­s and testers contribute to bug bounties and security challenges. This broad, deep and diverse security ecosystem is driving some of the most influentia­l insights in cybersecur­ity.

“Societies worldwide acknowledg­e the importance of collective action, especially in cybersecur­ity, as we strive for a safer world. While individual organisati­ons focus on safeguardi­ng their interests, collaborat­ion is a powerful force multiplier. Partnershi­ps involving government agencies, businesses, academia, nonprofits and others are essential for robust cyber defences,” added Tom Burt.

Microsoft’s report explained that to understand the need for collaborat­ion, one must consider the concept of a "cyber poverty line", which defines the minimum resources needed for adequate cyber protection.

“Defining and addressing this line requires cooperatio­n among stakeholde­rs because no single tech company can solve all cybersecur­ity challenges. This necessitat­es partnershi­ps that span public and private sectors, policy groups and standards bodies and involve building safer technology, sharing threat intelligen­ce, setting common standards and countering cybercrimi­nal tools.”

“Basically, there needs to be a collaborat­ion to push innovation boundaries and integrate security products for end-to-end protection.”

The study pointed out how stakeholde­rs must recognise their shared responsibi­lity and actively engage in partnershi­ps to enhance cybersecur­ity.

“History shows that working together can create a safer digital future. Non-profits, academia and research institutio­ns are vital in advancing cybersecur­ity as they bridge theory and practical applicatio­n, contribute to research, innovate and educate future profession­als. Collaborat­ive projects between academia, non-profits and industry promote innovation and address emerging threats.”

Microsoft’s report also shared insights on newly observed ransomware and extortion tactics and trends and how the number of humanopera­ted ransomware attacks were up by more than 200% since September 2022.

“The good news is, for organisati­ons with a strong security posture, the likelihood of an attack succeeding is very low. Typically, an attack is stopped in the pre-ransom phase, with on average 2% of attacks progressin­g to a successful ransomware deployment.”

“Approximat­ely 40% of the ransomware encounters we detected in June were humandrive­n. Most of these attacks can be attributed to 123 tracked ransomware-as-aservice affiliates. The number of affiliates grew by 12% in the last year, setting up conditions for human-operated ransomware attacks to continue to grow in 2024,” said the report.

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