Muscat Daily

Cyber warriors sound warning on WFH

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Tallinn, Estonia - Cyber warriors on NATO’s eastern edge are warning that the growing number of people working from home (WFH) globally due to the pandemic is increasing vulnerabil­ity to cyber attacks.

The Baltic state of Estonia hosts two cyber facilities for the Western military alliance - set up following a series of cyber attacks from neighbour Russia more than a decade ago.

“Large scale use of remote work has attracted spies, thieves and thugs,” Jaak Tarien, head of NATO’s Cooperativ­e Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence (CCDCOE), told AFP in an interview.

The increased amount of informatio­n travelling between institutio­nal servers and home networks is creating new challenges for employers.

“Tackling these new challenges is complicate­d and requires a lot of resources as well as a different kind of approach,” Tarien said.

“We are likely only scratching the surface in assessing the magnitude of malicious activities taking place in the COVIDera busy cyberspace.”

An EU-wide survey in September found that around a third of employees were working from home.

The concerns are echoed at NATO’s Cyber Range - a heavily-guarded facility protected by barbed wire in the centre of the capital Tallinn run by Estonian defence forces.

The server rooms inside serve as a platform for NATO cyber security exercises and training.

“Specialist­s have set up the work infrastruc­ture, but they cannot control the way people use their home internet or how secure it is,” said Mihkel Tikk, head of the Estonian Defence Ministry’s cyber policy department. Tikk said the latest cyberattac­ks have targeted Estonia’s health sector and Mobile-ID - the mobile phone based digital ID.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has also affected operations at the cyber facilities themselves, forcing the cancellati­on of offline exercises.

But the NATO Cyber Defence Centre said the silver lining is the growing popularity of the cyber security courses it is putting online.

The online courses include ‘Fighting a Botnet Attack’, ‘Operationa­l Cyber Threat Intelligen­ce’ and ‘IT Systems Attack and Defence’. There were 6,411 students by September 1 and the centre is aiming for 10,000 by the end of 2020.

The Cyber Defence Centre was set up following a series of cyberattac­ks of unpreceden­ted sophistica­tion on Estonian websites in 2007.

The Russian pro-Kremlin youth organisati­on Nashi later claimed responsibi­lity.

These days, Estonia faces a ‘continuous flow of attacks’ and repelling them requires constant work, Defence Minister Juri Luik told AFP.

But he said the country was in ‘a pretty good situation’ since it has had time to learn from past experience.

“We have worked diligently to guarantee that the computer networks are difficult to break in and the communicat­ion is encrypted - both military but also civilian communicat­ion.”

“So I think it is relatively more difficult to harm Estonia than many other countries who perhaps are not so used to working via cyberspace and haven't given too much attention to cyber defence,” he said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows Estonia’s Cyber Policy Department Director Mihkel Tikk at the NATO Cyber Range, in Tallinn on October 1
(AFP) This file photo shows Estonia’s Cyber Policy Department Director Mihkel Tikk at the NATO Cyber Range, in Tallinn on October 1

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