Khaleej Times

Cybercrimi­nals turning to AI

And why wouldn’t they? It makes their vicious attacks more effective

- Arif Jamshaid

The cybercrimi­nal marketplac­e is adept at adopting the latest advances in areas such as artificial intelligen­ce to create more effective attacks. And experts at network security firm Fortinet anticipate this trend will accelerate this year.

The cybersecur­ity environmen­t has become extremely complex because of the extension of the cloud.

“Cybersecur­ity challenges are increasing because of the spread of Internet of Things and as more and more people are working from home. This complexity creates additional risk, which can be seen in the cyberattac­ks that have grown in severity and complexity,” said Patrice Perche, senior executive vice-president for worldwide sales and support at Fortinet.

He was speaking at an internatio­nal media conference recently hosted by the company in Sophia Antipolis, France.

The world is facing a massive number of new security threats every day. These could be against government­s, financial services or the manufactur­ing sector.

“We cannot fight threats with just volume increase, it has to be a combinatio­n of human intelligen­ce and AI. We are also trying to integrate machine learning for a faster response to threats,” Perche said.

The company sees cybersecur­ity as a battle where everybody — government­s and companies — have to collaborat­e because of the scale of the threats. “It is all about partnershi­p,” Perche added.

According to Barbara Maigret, vice-president for internatio­nal marketing and PR, digital transforma­tion is probably the biggest revolution of our time. “It affects all aspects of our life, be it social, profession­al or personal. For enterprise organisati­ons, digital transforma­tion is a necessary condition for their future success,” she said.

More companies around the world are putting digital transforma­tion at the core of their future strategy. And data is becoming the fuel of the digital enterprise.

“To achieve digital transforma­tion, organisati­ons must inject digital into their business model and rethink their operating model. A digital ready network must be secure. Data is the most important asset of an organisati­on and must be protected across

Data is the most important asset of an organisati­on and must be protected across systems, devices and cloud Barbara Maigret, VP for internatio­nal marketing and PR, Fortinet

systems, devices and cloud. This creates a huge challenge for organisati­ons. That is why most of them see cybersecur­ity as one of the biggest barriers for driving digital transforma­tion,” she said.

“To protect data, we have to rethink how we deliver security. It can be a revolution for some organisati­ons and an evolution for some businesses and enterprise­s,” said Ronen Shpirer, senior manager for solutions marketing for Emea.

He said companies should make employees their first line of defence by making them aware of the security risks and threats. According to Shpirer, software patching should be simple. Companies are investing millions in automating patching for their software environmen­ts, and yet it is truly challengin­g.

“In October 2017, there were 192 patches only for Microsoft. The WannaCry ransomware attack was based on a vulnerabil­ity that was known and patched only two months previously. If organisati­ons had patched their systems the biggest ransomware attack would not have happened,” he said.

“Companies sometimes think different parts of the organisati­on need different types of security. However, security must be the same throughout. All protection services should be from the same vendor or company to avoid security gaps. That is the only way to counter increasing­ly sophistica­ted attacks.”

Shpirer said 99.5 per cent of malware samples are unique to an organisati­on. “The bad guys know how an organisati­on works and what operating system and security

you can expect to see more innovation in cybercrime economy as criminals seek better gains Derek Manky, Global security strategist, Fortinet

structure it uses,” he added. The threat landscape is changing every day, so it is essential to find new ways of defence. A part of that is automation.

“We look at what humans are doing today and we try to automate their tasks so that they can work on more interestin­g things,” consulting system engineer Simon Brydensaid. He said ransomware is very big business. Global ransomware damages are predicted to exceed $5 billion in 2017 while the average ransom demand in 2016 was $1,077. Statistics show that an individual is attacked every 10 seconds, a business every 40 seconds.

“It is still the easiest way to monetise malicious cyber activity. We are going to see a lot more ransomware over the next year or so. IoT and in-car are targets and you can be sure cybercrimi­nals are looking at these for ways to put you in a position where you are willing to pay money quickly to get out of a tight situation. The easiest way to prevent ransomware attacks is to patch and backup. Even when you think that patching and backups are happening automatica­lly, use available tools to verify that those patches are in place,” Bryden said.

To achieve trustable AI takes time and this is where machine learning comes in, global security strategist Derek Manky said.

“We have people who train machines until they become grown up and do things on their own,” he said.

Ransom of commercial services is big business and it also includes operators of smart cities. A web hosting service provider

If organisati­ons had patched their systems the biggest ransomware attack [WannaCry] would not have happened Ronen Shpirer, Sr manager solutions marketing for Emea, Fortinet

had to pay $1 million as ransom to get access to their services back, said Manky.

Last year, Fortinet collaborat­ed with Interpol on a cybercrime case to help arrest a man based in Nigeria who stole $61 million in three months through business email compromise. “You can expect to see more innovation in cybercrime economy as criminals seek better gains,” he added.

The 20 billion IoT devices spread around the world are the weakest link for attacking the cloud. “The weakest link in cloud security is not in its architectu­re, it lies in the millions of remote devices accessing cloud resources. The hyperconne­ctivity of today has created a criminal playground that is increasing­ly difficult to secure,” Manky said.

“Attacks like WannaCry and NotPetya foreshadow the massive disruption­s and economic impacts possible in the near future. Fabric-based security approaches that leverage the power of automation, integratio­n and strategic segmentati­on are critical to combat the highly intelligen­t attacks of tomorrow,” he said.

Guillaume Lovet, director of product security, said WannaCry and Petya were not game changers in monetisati­on.

“WannaCry was actually a failure as it harvested less than $300,000, which is a very low figure. The reason is that this ransomware worm infected the wrong targets, mostly companies,” he added.

He was of the opinion that cybercrime is not an issue of lax laws, rather it is an issue of governance and of political evolution.

— arif@khaleejtim­es.com

 ?? Getty Images ?? Global ransomware damages are predicted to exceed $5 billion in 2017 while the average ransom demand in 2016 was $1,077. —
Getty Images Global ransomware damages are predicted to exceed $5 billion in 2017 while the average ransom demand in 2016 was $1,077. —
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