The Manila Times

More sophistica­ted cybersecur­ity breaching tactics in PH for 2019

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GLOBAL cybersecur­ity solutions provider Trend

Micro shared its 2019 prediction­s report that highlights the trends and tactics cybercrimi­nals are most likely to employ in 2019.

The report, “Mapping the Future: Dealing with Pervasive and Persistent Threats,” highlights the growing threats faced by consumers and organizati­ons that are exacerbate­d by the increasing­ly connected world.

The report warns that attackers will increase in the effectiven­ess of proven attack methods, by adding more sophistica­ted elements to take advantage of the changing technology landscape.

“Cybercrimi­nals will continue to follow a winning formula — exploit existing flaws, social engineerin­g and stolen credential­s — to drive profits,” said Ian Felipe, country manager, Trend Micro Philippine­s. “As both corporate attacks surface and unknown cyber threats increase, it’s more important than ever for organizati­ons to put more resources behind cybersecur­ity education to help protect against these growing attacks.”

E-celeb accounts will be abused

The role of social engineerin­g in successful attacks against businesses and individual­s is predicted to increase throughout the year. It is expected that cybercrimi­nals will compromise famous YouTubers and other “online-famous” personalit­ies’ social media accounts, including Instagram and Twitter, by taking over their accounts via targeted phishing attacks.

These will shine a light on account security in mainstream media, but not before millions of users following these accounts have been affected by whatever payload the attackers have in store for them.

Filipinos spend an average of 3 hours and 57 minutes a day on social media sites. Among their activities are following celebritie­s and reading their updates on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Rise of extortion cases

Sextortion, or the process forcibly demanding money or sexual favors by threatenin­g to publish a victim’s recorded sexual activity, is a growing epidemic in the Philippine­s, with the country being seen as one of the crime’s biggest breeding ground. Even if there is no guarantee that a blackmaile­r will come through, the highly personal nature of this kind of attacks will make the victim seriously consider fulfilling the attacker’s demands, whether that means money or sexual favors.

As sextortion, in particular, becomes more widespread, this kind of attacks will affect, and perhaps even claim, more lives in 2019.

Fake news will continue

The 2018 Pulse Asia Research shared that 9 out of 10 Filipinos who surfed the internet to access their social media accounts were aware of fake news.

Despite this awareness, the side of technology that allows fake news propagator­s to sway public sentiment and present itself as legitimate news has become even more powerful, which leads to government­s expressing interest in regulating social media platforms.

House Bill 5021 in particular, or the proposed “Social Media Regulation Act of 2017,” aims for social media accounts to be subjected to utmost identity verificati­on to confirm authentici­ty.

TrendMicro believes that this year, the improvemen­ts social media has made to fight fake news will not be enough to keep up with the deluge of cyberpropa­ganda.

This proves to be alarming as the same survey showed that half of Filipinos who use the internet for social media have changed their views on government and politics based on what they see online.

More cloud-related software vulnerabil­ities

Trend Micro also predicts attackers will leverage on proven technologi­cal methods against the growing cloud adoption.

According to Cloud Readiness Index 2018, the Philippine­s was among the countries lagging behind in cloud infrastruc­ture and yet to mature in terms of cloud adoption. It is generally perceived that transition­ing to the cloud makes users more prone to security breaches and attacks.

Vulnerabil­ities found in cloud infrastruc­ture, such as containers, and weak cloud security measures will allow greater exploitati­on of accounts for cryptocurr­ency mining, leading to more damaging breaches due to misconfigu­red systems.

Attacks will be using AI-powered techniques

Attackers will also implement emerging technologi­es like artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to better anticipate movements of top-level executives. They can use AI to determine when and where corporate executives are expected to be in the future, such as the hotels their companies typically book them in, the restaurant­s they pick for meetings, and other preference­s that can help narrow down their next likely locations.

This will lead to more convincing targeted phishing messages, which can be critical to BEC attacks. Additional­ly, it is likely that BEC attacks will target more employees who report to C-level executives, resulting in continued global losses.

The threat landscape promises a lot of challenges for almost all sectors of the internet-using-public in 2019 even as faster internet, for better or worse, looms on the horizon. But the available tools and technologi­es should empower users and enterprise­s into positionin­g themselves more securely in the fight against cybercrimi­nals and other emerging threat actors.

A deep understand­ing of these issues is a step in the right direction.

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